2003
Foreign investment I W LATIN A W I R I E A AND THE CARIEORAN
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Foreign Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003 is the latest edition of a series published annually by the ECLAC Unit on Investment and Corporate Strategies. It was prepared by Alvaro Calderón, Michael Mortimore and Nicole Moussa, with assistance from Sebastián Vergara and Pablo Carvallo. Consultants Guillermo Anlló, Faustino Barrón and Marc Scheinman contributed to chapter 111. The statistical data and other inputs were compiled by Ivet Linares, Claudia Paz, Héctor Alarcón, Maria Ehrnstrom, Alberto Goyena, Stephanie Hogan, Anna Saller and Jaime Sepúlveda. Improvements in the statistical information’s quality, coverage and currency have permitted the Unit on Investment and Corporate Strategies to expand upon the more analytical aspects of the report and to benefit from the work of other institutions concerned with quantitative data. The information used in this publication has been drawn from a number of international agencies, including the International Monetary Fund, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, as well as a host of national institutions, such as central banks and investment promotion agencies in Latin America and the Caribbean. The data on major corporations in the region were obtained from the specialized journal América Economía. The use of this information source made it possible to standardize the critéria employed in this regard and to develop valuable inputs for the preparation of this document. Any comments or suggestions regarding this publication should be directed to Michael Mortimore (e-mail:
[email protected]).
Notes and explanations of symbols The following symbols have been used in this Study: Three dots (. . .) indicate that data are not available or are not separately reported. A minus sign (-) indicates a deficit or decrease, unless otherwise indicated. A full stop (.) is used to indicate decimals. Use of a hyphen between years, e.g. 1971-1973, signifies an annual average for the calendar years involved, including the beginning and the end years. The word “dollars” refers to United States dollars, unless otherwise specified. Figures and percentages in tables may not necessarily add up to the corresponding totals, because of rounding.
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Foreign investment 1N
LATINAMERICA
AND THE C A R I B B E A N
UNITED N A T I O N S
.
.
LUG. 2226-P May 2004
Copyright O United Nations 2004 All rights reserved Printed in Chile
Applications for the right to reproduce this work are welcomed and should be sent to the Secretary of the Publication Board, United Nations Headquarters, New York. N.Y. 10017, U.S.A.Member States and their governmental institutions may reproduce this work without prior authorization, but are requested to mention the source and inform the United Nations of such reproduction.
UNITED NATIONS PUBLICATIONS Sales No: E.04.II.G.54 ISSN printed version 1680-8649 ISSN online version: 1681-0287 ISBN 92-1-121445-9
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean. 2003
5
CONTENTS
Page ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................................................... SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS .....................................................................................................................
9 11
REGIONAL OVERVIEW ...............................................................................................................................
19
A . INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................................................... B. RECENT FDI TRENDS IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN ............................................ 1. Foreign direct investment worldwide .................................................................................................. 2 . Foreign direct investment in Latin America and the Caribbean: flows and trends .............................
19 25 25 27
C . THE OPERATIONS OF TRANSNATIONAL ENTERPRISES IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN .......................................................................................... 1. Transnational corporations ................................................................................................................... 2 . Transnational banks .............................................................................................................................
36 37 44
D . STRATEGIES OF TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS .................................................................... 1. Transnational corporations in search of natural resources .................................................................. 2 . Transnational firms in search of local markets for services ................................................................ 3 . Investments and asset purchases in the services sector .......................................................................
46 46 52 55
E . CONCLUSIONS ....................................................................................................................................... APPENDIX ............................................................................................................................................................
59 61
I1. EFFICIENCY SEEKING STRATEGIES TO CAPTURE EXPORT MARKETS: TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS IN COSTA RICA. HONDURAS. JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC .....
69
A . INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................................................................
69
B . EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS IN COSTA RICA. HONDURAS. JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC .....................................................................................................
75
C . STRATEGIES OF EFFICIENCY-SEEKING TNCS IN COSTA RICA. HONDURAS. JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC ..................................................................................................... 1. Textile and apparel articles: a rootless industry ................................................................................... 2 . The electronics industry: a broken chain? ........................................................................................... 3 . Medical devices: the new frontier ........................................................................................................ 4 . Efficiency seeking in the services sector .............................................................................................
83 87 92 96 97
D . CONCLUSIONS .......................................................................................................................................
98
I.
I11. INVESTMENT AND BUSINESS STRATEGIES IN THE AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY ...........................
101
A . INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................................................................
101
B . CHANGES IN THE GLOBAL AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY .................................................................
102
C . COMPETITIVENESS IN BRAZIL'S AND MEXICO'S AUTOMOTIVE SECTORS ...........................
113
D . CONCLUSIONS .......................................................................................................................................
132
Bibliography ...........................................................................................................................................................
135
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Tables. figures. boxes and diagrams Table 1.1 Table 1.2 Table 1.3 Table 1.4 Table 1.5 Table 1.6 Table 1.7 Table 1.8 Table 1.9 Table 11.1 Table 11.2 Table 11.3 Table 11.4 Table 11.5 Table 11.6 Table 11.7 Table 11.8 Table 11.9 Table 11.1O Table 11.11 Table 111.1 Table 111.2 Table 111.3 Table 111.4 Table 111.5 Table 111.6 Figure I .1 Figure 1.2 Figure 1.3 Figure 1.4 Figure 1.5 Figure 1.6 Figure 1.7 Figure 1.8 Figure 1.9
Determinants of FDI in recipient countries. by corporate strategy .............................................. Latin America and the Caribbean: the strategies of transnational corporations .......................... Regional distribution of net FDI inflows worldwide. 1991-2003 ................................................ Latin America and the Caribbean: net FDI inflows by subregion. 1990-2003 ............................ Mexico. Central America and the Caribbean: net inward FDI. 1990-2002 ................................. South America: FDI inflows. 1990-2003 ..................................................................................... Latin America: largest foreign banks by consolidated assets. first half of 2003 ......................... Telefónica de España and América Móvil: number of mobile telephone customers. 2003 ........ Impact of business strategies on recipient economies .................................................................. Costa Rica: share of world imports and export structure. 1985-2001 ......................................... Dominican Republic: share of world imports and export structure. 1985-200 1 ......................... Honduras: share of world imports and export structure. 1985-2001 ........................................... Jamaica: share of world imports and export structure. 1985-2001 .............................................. Principal incentives offered in export processing zones (EPZs) in Costa Rica. the Dominican Republic. Honduras and Jamaica .................................................................................................. Costa Rica. Honduras. Jamaica and the Dominican Republic: geographical destination of total exports. 1985-2002 ........................................................................................ United States: leading manufactures imports from Costa Rica. Honduras. Jamaica and the Dominican Republic. by two-digit SITC code. 1990-2002 ............................... Costa Rica. Honduras. Jamaica. Dominican Republic: share of goods covered by production sharing provisions out of total United States imports. 1980-2002 ......... United States: apparel imports under the United States-Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA). selected countries. 2001 ........................................................................................ Costa Rica. Honduras. Jamaica and the Dominican Republic: United States content of total United States imports under the production sharing mechanism. 1980-2002 ..................... United States: apparel imports (SITC. Rev. 3. 841.845). by country of origin. 1990-2002 ....... Mexico: share of world imports and export structure. 1985-2001 .............................................. Brazil: share of world imports and export structure. 1985-2001 ................................................. Brazil: share of Latin American imports and export structure. 1985-2001 ................................. Mexico and Brazil: domestic output. domestic sales of domestic output. imports and exports ....................................................................................................................... Mexico: installed capacity for vehicle production. by firm. 2003 ............................................... Brazil: installed capacity for vehicle production. by firm. 2003 ................................................. Latin America and the Caribbean: net resource transfer. 1980-2003 .......................................... Latin America and the Caribbean: net FDI inflows and outflows of FDI-related income. 1990-2003 ................................................................................................... Latin America and the Caribbean: net FDI inflows to the leading economies. by sector. 1996-2002 ..................................................................................................................................... The ten leading investor countries in the six leading FDI recipient countries. 1996-2002 .................................................................................................................... Latin America: total sales of the 500 largest firms by ownership. 1990-2002 ............................ Latin America: total sales of the 500 largest firms by sector. 1990-2002 ................................... Latin America: total sales of the 100 largest service enterprises by ownership. 1990-2002 ............................................................................................................. Latin America: total sales of the 1O0 largest manufacturing enterprises. by ownership. 1990-2002 ............................................................................................................. Latin America: total exports of the 200 largest exporting firms. by ownership. 1990-2002 ......
23 24 26 27 30 32 45 56 60 75 76 77 78 81 82 84 85 85 86 89 114 115 116 120 121 122 28 28 29 30 37 38 41 42 43
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean. 2003
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Page
Figure I .10 Figure 11.1 Figure 11.2 Figure 11.3 Figure 111.1 Figure 111.2 Figure 111.3 Figure 111.4 Figure 111.5 Box 1.1 Box 1.2 Box 1.3 Box 1.4 Box 1.5 Box 1.6 Box 1.7 Box 1.8 Box 11.1 Box 11.2 Box 11.3 Box 11.4 Box 11.5 Box 11.6 Box 11.7 Box 11.8 Box 111.1 Box 111.2 Box 111.3 Box 111.4 Box 111.5 Box 111.6 Box 111.7 Diagram 111.1 Diagram 111.2 Diagram 111.3 Diagram 111.4 Diagram 111.5
Latin America: the 100 largest banks by assets and type of ownership. 1999-2003 .................................................................................................................. United States: apparel imports (SITC. Rev. 3. 841-845) from Costa Rica. Honduras. Jamaica and the Dominican Republic. 1989-2002 ..................................................... Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic: market share of the electrical and electronic products subsectors in North American imports .................................................. Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic: market share of North American imports of medical instruments and appliances (SITC. Rev. 3. 872) .......................................... Mexico and Brazil: foreign direct investment in the assembly industry ..................................... Mexico and Brazil: foreign direct investment in the autoparts industry ...................................... Brazil and Mexico: utilization of productive capacity to manufacture vehicles. 1995-2003 ...................................................................................................................... Mexico: propensity to export. by firm. 1993-2003 ...................................................................... Brazil: propensity to export. by firm. 1993-2003 ........................................................................ A new message in the literature on spillovers and the impact of foreign direct investment on host economies .... ....................................................................................... Statistical shortcomings in FDI data ............................................................................................. Origin and consideration of TNC statistics .................................................................................. Local players gain ground in the services sector ......................................................................... Foreign direct investment and environmental problems .............................................................. Foreign direct investment and its contribution to fiscal revenues ................................................ Renegotiation of utility rates in Argentina ................................................................................... The Brazilian State bails out transnational electric power firms ................................................. INTEL‘S international expansion strategy .................................................................................... Ireland’s experience in attracting efficiency-seeking FDI ........................................................... Central America and the Caribbean: mechanisms affording special access to the United States market ................................................................................................ The Costa Rican Investment Board (CINDE): the key institution behind the country’s success ..................................................................................................................... Three models of adaptation to changes in the global apparel industry ....................................... Setting its sights on INTEL: the impact on Costa Rica ................................................................ Procter & Gamble: reaping the benefits of Costa Rica’s education policy ................................. Illusory or genuine competitiveness? ........................................................................................... The internationalization of Toyota Motor Corporation ................................................................ New concepts for understanding changes in autoparts manufacturing ....................................... The different stages in the development of Mexico’s automotive industry ................................. Changing policies in Brazil’s automotive industry ...................................................................... Unsustainable incentives in Brazil’s automotive industry ........................................................... New modular plants in Brazil: an experiment with incomplete results ....................................... The vicious circle affecting Mexico’s supplier network .............................................................. From vertical integration to value chain modularity .................................................................... Modular production network model ............................................................................................. From part to module ..................................................................................................................... Brazil: structure of the production chain for a generic assembler ............................................... Mexico: preferential access to leading markets through free trade agreements ....................................................................................................................
44 91
95 96 120 120 123 123 124
20 22 36 39 49 50 53 54 71 73 79 81 87 93 97 99 105 110 117 118 119 125
127 103 104 109 128 129
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APPENDIX Table 1.A .1 Table I-A.2 Table I-A.3 Table I-A.4 Table I-AS
Latin America: sectoral distribution of FDI. 1996-2003 .............................................................. Latin America: leading investor countries. 1996-2003 ................................................................ Latin America and the Caribbean: acquisition of private enterprises for amounts exceeding US$ 100 million. 2003 ................................................................................................ Latin America: 50 largest transnational enterprises by consolidated sales. 2002 ....................... Latin America: Main acquisitions in the retail trade subsector. 2002-2004 ................................
63 64 65 66 68
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
9
I In 2003, flows of foreign direct investment (FDI) to Latin America and the Caribbean continued to shrink for the fourth year running. With this latest decline, Latin America and the Caribbean turned in the worst performance of any world region. This situation was exacerbated by the steady increase in profit remittances and in outflows of other FDI-related resources, which has diminished its impact on the balance of payments. The decrease in FDI inflows over the past few years has varied across subregions and countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, however. In Mexico and the Caribbean basin, inflows have diminished less, while South America has been more strongly affected. Within South America, inflows were quite stable in the Andean Community but were down sharply in MERCOSUR and particularly so in Brazil. This publication devotes special attention to the strategies employed by transnational corporations seeking to heighten their efficiency with a view to moving into new markets. Accordingly, one chapter is devoted to an examination of FDI trends in Latin America and the Caribbean, while the other two deal with different aspects of this kind of corporate strategy. One analyses events in Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Honduras and Jamaica, which are regarded as cost centres for labour-intensive activities producing low value-added goods, while the other looks at the challenges facing the Brazilian and Mexican automotive industry production chain with regard to upgrading to manufacturing centres.
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Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
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SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
I
Foreign direct investment (FDI) has transformed Latin America, modernizing branches of industry and improving many of its services and some of its infrastructure. The evidence is everywhere, from the export platforms in Mexico and Costa Rica that assemble competitive motor vehicles and microprocessors, respectively, to the upgraded telecommunications network in Brazil, financial services in Argentina and road infrastructure and airport services in Chile. Although transnational corporations (TNCs) have been very active in recent years, some questions are now being raised as to the net benefits of their operations in the region. These doubts revolve around the existence, in some cases, of a disparity between host countries’ expectations at the time such investments are made and the difficulties that have arisen along the way.
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This process is attributable, in the first instance, to the continuing shrinkage of FDI inflows. The volume of these inflows has been declining for four consecutive years now, after peaking in 1999, thus making the Latin American and Caribbean region the only one in the world to have experienced a protracted downtrend in such investment. Average annual inflows of FDI to the region almost quadrupled (from US$ 15.8 to US$61 billion)
between 1990-1994 and 1995-1999, but had receded by 40% (to US$36.5 billion) by 2003. The decrease from 2002 to 2003 amounted to 19%, the worst result out of all regions in the world. This situation is compounded by the fact that, while FDI inflows have been moving steadily downward, profit remittances and other FDIrelated payments continue to climb, thereby dampening the balance-of-payments effect.
Figure 1 LATIN AMERICA ANDTHE CARIBBEAN: NET FDI INFLOWS AND FDI-RELATED PAYMENTS, 1990-2003 (Billions of dollars) 90.0 7
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80.0 70.0 60.0
50.0 40.0 30.0 20.0 10.0
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1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
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C-C-bNet
FDI inflows
<*!Net
FDI-related payments
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Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of balance-of-payments statistics from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Notes: Net FDI inflows are equivalent to the FDI received by the reporting economy minus the FDI-related outflows generated by the same foreign companies. It does not include FDI outflows generated by residents of the reporting economy. FDI-related payments cover net external profit remittances by foreign companies.This category does not include net payments made by residents to the reporting economy. Figures for 2003 are estimates.
The decline of FDI inflows has varied across subregions and countries, however. In Mexico and the Caribbean basin (Central America and the Caribbean), they have been more stable, with average annual FDI inflows doubling between 1990-1994 and 1995-1999 (from US$ 6.8 billion to US$ 15.4 billion) and then remaining at that level in 2003. South America has had a
rockier ride, as FDI inflows increased by a factor of five between 1990-1994and 1995-1999 (from US$8.9 billion to US$45.5 billion) before sliding to less than half that level by 2003 (US$21.5 billion). Within South America, FDI inflows to the Andean Community were much more stable than those directed towards MERCOSUR and Chile.
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Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 1 LATIN AMERICA ANDTHE CARIBBEAN: NET FDI INFLOWS 1990-2003a (Millions of dollars) 19901994b
1995199gb
2000
200 1
5 430 575 222 12 88 41 20 192 840 124 171 270 274 6 845 1 207 4 880 3 027 1 703 99 51 2 843 85 818 303 801 836 8 930 15 775
11 398 2 067 481 282 213 120 194 777 1 949 285 594 550 519 15 414 5 401 30 188 10 599 19 240 185 164 9 945 71 1 2 796 639 2 350 3 449 45 534 60 948
16 449 1 964 409 173 230 282 267 603 2 014 468 953 472 121 20 427 4 860 43 590 10 418 32 779 119 274 9 266 736 2 299 720 81O 4 701 57 716 78 143
26 569 2 017 454 250 456 195 150 513 2 420 614 1 079 685 42 31 006 4 200 25 039 2 166 22 457 95 320 9 289 706 2 500 1 330 1 070 3 683 38 528 69 534
2002
2003c
14 435 1 354 662 208 110 143 174 57 2 710 48 1 96 1 737 531 18 499 1 888 17 496 775 16 566 -22 177 7 096 677 1 974 1 275 2 391 779 26 480 44 979
10 731 1 742 466 140 104 216 24 1 576 2 466 500 700 700 566 14 939 2 982 11 397 1103 10 144 19 131 7 148 357 1291 1 637 1 332 2 531 21 527 36 466
~
Mexico Central America Costa Rica El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Nicaragua Panama Caribbean Jamaica Dominican Republic Trinidad and Tobago Other Mexico/Caribbean basin Chile MERCOSUR Argentina Brazil Paraguay Uruguay Andean Community Bolivia Colombia Ecuador Peru VenezueI a South America Regional total
~~
Source: ECLAC, on the basis of balance-of-payments statistics from IMF and national reporting agencies in the region. The 2003 figures are estimates based on information from the countries’ central banks. These figures differ from those published by ECLAC in the Preliminary Overview of the Economies of Latin America and the Caribbean, 2002, since in the Overview, net FDI is calculated as the difference between inflows to the reporting economy and FDI outflows generated by residents of that same economy. a Does not include financial centres. Net FDI inflows are defined as FDI inflows to the reporting economy minus capital outflows generated by the same foreign companies. Annual averages. Estimates.
The presence of TNCs remains significant in spite of the decline in FDI inflows. The transnationalization process which accompanied the surge in FDI during the preceding decade is also still a powerful force in the economic affairs of the region. For example, during 20002002, TNCs accounted for 39% of the sales of the top 500 companies in the region, 55% of the top 100 manufacturing firms’ sales, 38% of the 100 leading service companies’ sales, 42% of the exports of the top 200 exporters and 37% of the 100 largest banks’ assets. Within this context, the possibility of a widening gap
between host-country expectations and emerging problems in TNC operations has fuelled the debate regarding FDI in the region. This is therefore a good time to re-evaluate the impact of FDI in Latin America and the Caribbean. The point of departure for the present analysis is therefore an awareness of the fact that FDI can be viewed from a wide range of vantage points and that the choice of analytic approach often determines the conclusions that are drawn. There are two traditional schools of thought which to some extent reflect the wide range of
14
possible perspectives: (i) one views FDI in terms of external financing from a balance-of-payments perspective; and (ii) the other focuses on the microeconomic impacts of FDI from an industrial organization perspective. The first tends to evaluate FDI in terms of the volume of inflows, taking a “the more the better” point of view and sometimes linking the analysis of FDI inflows to macroeconomic variables such as growth, exports and employment. The second, on the other hand, associates FDI with TNC operations and assesses those operations based on their contribution to the development of local production based on criteria such as technology transfer and assimilation, the establishment and deepening of production linkages, the training of human resources and enterprise development. In this case, the quality of FDI or TNC operations is as important as its volume or scale. This second school of thought tends to believe that no matter how positive the impact of FDI might be, it can always be improved upon. Both lines of thought are necessary to achieve a better understanding of FDI as an economic phenomenon, but they are rarely found together. There are several good reasons for combining these different analytical perspectives. On the one hand, considerable dissonance has emerged in the specialized literature in this respect. Most of the traditional studies tend to assume that elements identified with the microeconomic perspective (technology transfer, production linkages, human resource training and enterprise development) are spillovers that are generated once a critical level of FDI has entered the host economy. However, more recent empirical studies based on more refined methodologies have demonstrated that such outcomes are by no means a foregone conclusion and that the presence of such spillovers should be corroborated rather than simply assumed for the purpose of analysing FDI impacts. Furthermore, it can be shown that the information upon which both schools of thought are based, that is, official information on the balance of payments and FDI flows and the available data on the operations of TNC affiliates, suffers from significant shortcomings in terms of its coverage, coherence and usefulness. The method used in this study draws upon a number of different information sources in evaluating corporate strategies in order to arrive at a coherent interpretation of FDI in Latin America and the Caribbean. The result makes it possible to define the four principal focal points of FDI from the perspective of the corporate strategies that drive them: (i) the natural-resource-seeking strategy
ECLAC
focuses on the petroleum and gas sector (Andean Community, Argentina and Trinidad and Tobago) and on the mining sector (Chile, Argentina and the Andean Community); (ii) the market-seeking strategy is centred on the larger economies of the region (in the case of goods, the best examples are the automotive industry of MERCOSUR and food, beverages and tobacco in Brazil, Argentina and Mexico, while in the case of services, the clearest examples are the financial, telecommunications and energy industries and retail trade, especially in South America); (iii) the efficiencyseeking strategy focuses on capturing new export markets and is applied primarily in Mexico (automotive, electronics and apparel industries) and the Caribbean basin (apparel); and (iv) the technological-assetsseeking strategy is based on TNCs that form partnerships or alliances for purposes of innovation and technological development (no clear examples of the application of this strategy are evident in Latin America or the Caribbean). A great deal of research has gone into the preparation of the annual editions of Foreign Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean. Recent editions have included chapters dealing with the experiences of recipient countries (Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Argentina and the Andean Community), investor countries (United States, Japan, Spain and the European Union) and sectors in which FDI in the region is concentrated (the automotive, apparel and telecommunications industries, the hydrocarbons sector and financial services). On the basis of this research, the available statistical data on FDI inflows and TNC operations and the information compiled for this year’s study, a general picture can be pieced together of FDI and TNC operations in the region, which follow two main patterns: In Mexico and the Caribbean basin, the bulk of FDI comes from efficiency-seelung TNCs which set up export platforms in this subregion as part of their regional or international systems of integrated production. These local assembly operations mainly of United States-based TNCs- are primarily cost centres for higher-technology activities, such as the automotive and electronics industries, or lowtechnology activities, such as apparel. The new global competition faced by these industries obliges TNCs to search for low-cost, large-scale production sites near major markets for the labour-intensive aspects of their production processes. Mexico offers preferential access to the North American market by way of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), while many Caribbean basin countries offer special access to the United States market by
15
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 2 LATIN AMERICA ANDTHE CARIBBEAN: TNC STRATEGIES Corporate strategy/ sector
Goods
Services
Natural resourceseeking
Local marketseeking (national or regional)
fetroleumhatural gas: Andean Community, Argentina, Trinidad and Tobago Mining: Chile, Argentina, Andean Community
Automotive: MERCOSUR Chemical: Brazil Food products:
Tourism: Mexico, Caribbean basin
Finance: Mexico, Chile, Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Brazil Telecommunications: Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Peru, Venezuela Retail trade: Brazil, Argentina, Mexico
Argentina, Brazil, Mexico Beverages: Argentina, Brazil, Mexico Tobacco: Argentina, BraziI, Mexico
Efficiency-seeking (to capture export markets)
Technological assetseeking
Automotive: Mexico Electronics: Mexico, Caribbean basin
Aparel: Caribbean basin, Mexico
Business services: Costa Rica
Nectrical energy: Colombia, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Central America Gas distribution: Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Bolivia
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
way of the United States-Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA). As a result, Mexico and the Caribbean basin have witnessed a dramatic improvement in their international competitiveness as it relates to their participation as sources of the motor vehicles, electronics and apparel imported by the United States. In South America, FDI is primarily generated by TNCs following local-market-seeking and naturalresource-seeking strategies. The first of these strategies is most evident among European TNCs in telecommunications, energy infrastructure and finance, especially in the MERCOSUR countries and Chile. The deregulation and liberalization of these activities, coupled with broad privatization programmes and the active internationalization strategy of some (mainly Spanish) TNCs, have been key factors driving FDI flows to this subregion. One result of this type of FDI has been an improvement in the systemic competitiveness of these countries, specifically in terms of services and infrastructure that facilitate export activity but do not in themselves generate it. FDI that follows a natural-resourceseeking strategy has been centred in the
Andean Community, Chile and Argentina, which possess high-quality natural resources -especially petroleum, natural gas, copper and gold- and facilitating regulatory frameworks. One of the outcomes has been an improvement in the international competitiveness of these countries’ natural resources. This simplified overview of FDI in Latin America and the Caribbean can be taken as a starting point for the interpretation of corporate strategies in the region. This year’s report builds on that foundation by tracking the progression of events with regard to natural-resourceseeking and market-seeking (services) strategies in chapter I, entering into a more detailed examination of the situation in respect of efficiency-seeking strategies in four countries of the Caribbean basin -Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Honduras and Jamaica- in chapter I1 and comparing the situation in the automotive industry in Mexico and Brazil in chapter 111.This analysis, coupled with the previous years’ reports, makes it possible to examine the gap existing between host countries’ expectations and actual FDI flows in terms of the benefits and costs associated with TNC operations driven by each of these various types of corporate strategies.
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Table 3 IMPACTS OF CORPORATE STRATEGIES IN HOST COUNTRIES
FDI strategy
Potential benefits
Possible difficulties
Natural-resourceseeking
Increased natural-resource exports Improved international competitiveness of natural resources High local content of exports Employment in non-urban areas Tax revenues and royalty income
Enclave activities not integrated into local economy Little local processing of resources Cyclical international prices Low tax revenues from non-renewable resources Environmental pollution
Local-marketseeking (national or regional)
New local economic activities Increased local content New/deepened production linkages Local enterprise development Improved services (quality, coverage and price).and improved systemic competit iveness
Production of goods and services not internationally competitive (not world class) Weak position in terms of international competitiveness Regulatory and competition problems Disputes in relation to international investment obligations Crowding out of local companies
Efficiency-seeking (to capture export markets)
Increased exports of manufactures Improved international competitiveness of manufactures Transfer/assimilation of technology Training of human resources New/deepened production Iinkages Local enterprise development Evolving from an export platform into a manufacturing centre
Becoming stuck in the low-value-added trap Focus on static rather than dynamic advantages Truncated production linkages: dependence of assembly operations on imported components Crowding out of local companies ”Race to the bottom” in production costs (salaries, social benefits, exchange rate) “Race to the top” in incentives (tax, infrastructure) Limited cluster creation
Technological-assetseeking
Technology transfer Improved science and technology infrastructure Specialized logistics development
Low propensity to invest in technology Stagnation of production Unfocused national policy
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
Generally speaking, FDI from natural-resourceseeking TNCs has held steady because international petroleum, natural gas, copper and gold prices have recently been relatively high, and FDI in these activities is usually independent of the host country’s macroeconomic situation. Significant investments have been made or committed to in the petroleum industry by TotalFinaElf, Statoil and ChevronTexaco and by Royal DutcMShell and Mitsubishi in Venezuela, Repsol-YPF in Argentina and a group led by Alberta Energy Ltd. in Ecuador. Hunt Oil and Tractabel have invested heavily in the Camisea natural gas project in Peru. BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto continue their major investments in the Escondida copper mine in Chile. Barrick Gold has
undertaken major investment commitments in gold mines in Argentina and Peru, as has Meridian Gold in Peru. Host-country expectations with regard to FDI driven by this type of strategy have been centred on increasing exports of natural resources with a view to raising international competitiveness in that industry. These countries also hope that these operations will help increase local content, create more non-urban jobs and raise their tax revenues and royalty income. Chapter I reviews some of the associated costs. For example, one of those costs -environmental degradation- has become a major factor in relation to past (the Texaco operations in Ecuador), present (curtailing United States EximBank credits to the Camisea project in Peru) and future (the
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
17
suspension of the Alumysa aluminium project in Chile) natural resource projects. In addition, the question as to whether or not to tax production activities based on nonrenewable resources and charge royalty payments on such projects have sparked controversies in Bolivia and Chile. Despite these difficulties, natural-resource-seeking FDI continues to be a major economic activity in the region. This situation is quite different from that of servicesmarket-seeking FDI in the region, which has come to a virtual standstill. Until recently, this was the most significant category of FDI in Latin America and the Caribbean; however, the contraction of domestic demand in several of the major economies within the context of macroeconomic adjustment processes involving sharp currency devaluations has led to a sizeable drop in this type of investment. Chapter I shows that many public utility operators could not meet their external debt commitments when rates were frozen and thus stopped investing; in fact, some actually sold off their local assets. One of the most serious problems of this sort arose in Argentina, where in January 2002 the Public Emergency and Exchange Rate Reform Act redenominated public utility rates in Argentine pesos instead of dollars, froze them and assigned the Ministry of Economic Affairs the task of renegotiating the concessions of privatized service providers. In July of 2003, the new Administration created the Ministry of Federal Planning, Public Investment and Services and decided to review and renegotiate all public service contracts held by privatized companies (telecommunications, electricity, gas, water, railways, roads, postal service and airports) by the end of 2004. This decision was met with anger by the service providers, most of which are TNCs. More than 25 suits have been brought against the Government of Argentina by foreign investors for failure to comply with the investment treaties that it has signed. Another complicated case (but one in which a negotiated solution was achieved) arose in the electricity sector in Brazil, where the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) bailed out a number of TNCs, including the United States firm AES Corporation. Given the severity of these problems and the slump in domestic demand, many of these firms are pulling out of the region, including Vodafone, BellSouth, Verizon, France Telecom and AT&T, among the telecoms, and Royal Ahold and JC Penney in retail trade. Some TNCs, such as Telefónica de España, have made further investments in order to maintain their market power as new regional competitors emerge, such as América Móvil; however, several local groups in retail trade in Chile and in financial services in Brazil have taken advantage of the new situation to position themselves better vis-a-vis foreign firms.
In the case of efficiency-seeking FDI in Latin America and the Caribbean that is focused on enabling firms to conquer other markets, two variants are associated with the relevant regional or international systems of integrated production: the Caribbean basin model for the apparel industry, and the Mexican model for electronics and motor vehicles. With respect to the Caribbean basin model, as exemplified by the experiences of Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Honduras and Jamaica, chapter I1 demonstrates that FDI inflows are shrinking because this model, which is based on relatively low wages, export processing zone (EPZ) tax incentives and special access to the United States market via the HTS 9802 production-sharing mechanism, is losing its comparative advantages as the United States market opens up to new competitors. Host countries expected this model to boost apparel exports, improve international competitiveness and lead to positive impacts for the country in the form of technology transfer and assimilation, human resource training, new and deepened production linkages and local enterprise development. However, most countries have found that this model is based on unsustainable incentives and that it locks them into a low-value-added trap that has not permitted any significant kind of industrial or technological upgrading. The result has been illusory rather than authentic competitiveness. Costa Rica’s experience has proved to be the exception thanks to greater clarity in terms of the country’s strategic objectives, appropriate national policy instruments and solid institutions. Chapter I11 indicates that a relatively large volume of efficiency-seeking FDI is flowing into the Mexican automotive industry. This is chiefly attributable to the fact that United States-based TNC automobile and vehicle parts makers are closing down plants in the United States and opening up others in Mexico to serve the North American market. The installed capacity for vehicle production in Mexico doubled between 1994 and 2003, and both the Mexican Government and the automotive TNCs operating there hope to see it double again by 20 10. Host-country expectations originally focused on increased exports and gains in international competitiveness; more recently, however, the desire to improve local impacts in the form of technology transfer and assimilation, human resources training, production linkages, local enterprise development and the aim of growing the export platform into an integrated manufacturing centre have come to the fore. One of the problems that has arisen is that the Mexican automotive industry has tied its fortunes to the United States market and the country has not yet succeeded in attracting other, perhaps more competitive, firms such
18
as Toyota and Honda. Another problem is that the Mexican automotive supplier base is very closely integrated into the United States production base and is therefore unable to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the different free trade agreements to which Mexico is party while complying with the established rules of origin for each one. The Mexican supplier base is founded on strict cost-centre criteria that inhibit investment in the technology needed to turn the industry into an integrated production cluster. In order to turn this situation around, the Mexican authorities will probably have to use more active policies to attract more innovative firms and their suppliers, to improve upon the existing supplier base and to promote the production of models that are assembled solely in Mexico and that conform to the rules of origin of the major markets. In conclusion, the Latin American and Caribbean region has benefited enormously from the FDI boom of the 1990s. However, when FDI inflows started to wane, specific problems related to the individual corporate strategies driving that boom began to grow more serious. Upon reflection, a very important lesson can be drawn from the events in the region: host countries should not only try to attract FDI but should
ECLAC
also be alert to its benefits and costs. Most Latin American countries have fulfilled only the first half of this equation. Recent experience in the region suggests that the benefits to be derived from FDI by a receiving economy are not a foregone conclusion and do not simply “spill over” into the host economy merely by virtue of the presence of FDI. Evidently, it is much easier to attract FDI that will have quite limited effects through the use of passive policies than to ensure adequate FDI benefits through the use of suitable policies designed to attract high-quality FDI and to minimize any problems that may arise. Other regions, such as Asia and Europe, appear to be employing more proactive policies. They are also obtaining more benefits per unit of FDI. This demonstrates that policy does indeed matter. The Latin American and Caribbean countries should employ productive development strategies that clearly set out their national priorities as a basis for defining what they expect to gain from FDI, with due regard for the differences existing among the various corporate strategies that are driving this kind of investment. This is why policies on FDI must have clearly defined objectives and be anchored in institutions equipped with rules and with human and financial resources that ensure they will be up to the task.
19
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
. I. REGIONAL OVERVIEW
Total foreign direct investment (FDI) in Latin America and the Caribbean approached US$36.5 billion in 2003, which represented a 19% retreat from the previous year’s figure -the steepest fall recorded in any of the world regions (UNCTAD, 2004). Flows of FDI to the region have been trending downward since attaining an all-time high in 1999but, despite this new reduction, transnational corporations (TNCs) still maintain a forceful regional presence. This situation can be characterized as the transnationalization of Latin American economic assets,
as foreign firms expand their presence in the various activities of the local economies. Understanding the FDI phenomenon and TNC activities requires concepts and analytical frameworks that go beyond merely describing their scale. The following section sets out a framework for analysis based on the main strategies of TNCs, which makes it possible to gain a better understanding of the forces that drive the regional FDI phenomenon.
A. INTRODUCTION
Foreign direct investment is a phenomenon that can be analysed and interpreted from different standpoints, and choosing one perspective rather than another tends largely to predetermine the conclusions drawn about its trends. There are two traditional views of FDI: one focusing on aspects related to external financing from a balance-of-payments perspective, and the other focusing on productive development from an industrial organization standpoint. The first of these views generally takes an aggregate approach and tends to evaluate the FDI phenomenon in terms of the volume of net inflows. Linked to this perspective is the analysis that directly relates FDI flows to macroeconomic variables, such as gross fixed capital formatiqn, exports and employment.
Even more important, FDI is generally assumed to automatically internalize more advanced technology in the recipient countries, along with enhanced human resource skills and better production linkages, among other benefits. The second approach seeks to evaluate FDI in microeconomic terms. No assumption of automatic benefits is made, and the quality of FDI is usually considered to be as important as its volume. Moreover, the main analytical focus shifts from “FDI” to “TNC activities” in this approach. The analysis examines the extent to which transnational corporations contribute to the local economy, in terms of (i) the emergence of new activities that extend or deepen the industrialization
ECLAC
20
process; (ii) techiiology access, transfer and assimilation: (iii) the establishment and deepening o f productive linkages; (iv) human resource training alid skill development; and (v) local business development. Ruth approaches are necessary to achieve a better and niore complete understanding of the ml phenomenon; yet they are seldom applied together. T h e m arc additional rcaqons for uying thc two perspectives to analyse FUI. Firstly, the specialist lilerature displays considerable d i s a g r e e m e n t . For example, the traditional analysts of spillovers arising from FDI generally adopts a highly positive attitude, which assumes that the larger the FDl inflows the greatcr will be the benefits in the host economy. Nonetheless, recent empirical work on this subject, mpccially in dcvclr,pins countries, tends to adopt ;1 more cautious stance, having
A
found mixed evidence for the benefits (see box I. 1). T ~ I S suggcsts the nccd for grcatcr prcciFinn when analysing impacts. Another r e a w n fur uying hoth perqpectives ir the poor quality of statistical data available at the aggregate Icvcl, hoth on FDT f l r m h and r m TNC opcrationl; (scc box 1.2). The shortcomings of official statistics on FUI and rrn lhc opcraliuns o r TNC suhxidiaries in IwsL countries are examined in sections U and C of this chapter. respectively. In this context, an adequate analytical framework that integrates hoth vicwq and also
draws on statistical data from a variety of sources, could hclp tu o n x m m c thc dcficicncics dcwrihcd, thcrehy leading to a better understanding of the fundamentals or ~ h FDI c phcriclrricriori md TNC activities.
Box 1.1 M E W MESSAGE IN THE LITERATURE DP4 SPILLOVERS AND THE IMPACT O f FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT QN HQST ECONOMIES
Ouring the tweritieli century, in the context of the Cold War, fhe kaditímat western view of the impact of FDI on host economies was excessively favourable, based Ireqwntly on thR asstimptinn that the effects would be automatic and clearly visible. The original criticism of thts view, often supported by the communtsl ~ I Q c , daimed that ttie impact was by defirirtion negative since i t was a manifestation ot irnperiatisrn or nco1 k C S 01 FDI wa
lhal were more scten'!ific. This The most widefy known aspect 01 ?hewestern visw 1s based on the original literature on foreign investment snlllnwrrs. Thh~sdllover conceDt A ,
suggests that once foreicn invcstmcnt llows into the host economy have reactwrf a csrtaln level, a se:ies of Rmefitflts such as technology translsr, prgduclive tinkages, humarkresource skill enhancernept, @iCi lwdl i~usness deuelopment would "spill wet" ir110 the lwat ecuriorny, just like water owerflowmg from a glass. Atthough this idea of automatic and cffcctiuc bcnefrk prevailed for a long t h e . this is no longer 1% case A coinptctc rcasscssrnent of the literature on FDt SSIIICVC~S, based 01 anpirical case studies, !7a5 prodticed new conclusions $at suggest that the impack are nether exciusivcly nor necessarily- ppsitrve. In these new studies, which use improved rnethodofoyies, I\ is oflen argued that
.
thc effects of fnreign inuesment have bccn ncutral or negative; or, in the best of cases, the resulting situation is unctsar. espmatly in the CBYB 01 developing and Pansthon ecmomieg (see lable below) The debate has thus shifted from an ideological approach to a more technical one. in whlch it Is c h r that while pasitivg impacts from FDI in hnsI countries are !tkely, they arB k r from automatic: so positiva d e c k need io be demonstrated mther than ass[ These new findings have maja: :mplications. D ~ FofI w%ch is that towards FDI shouid focus IFISS on achicving a critical mass of investmen% and more DE ensuring these arc appropriate lg tRe country's productive deuelopmmt goals.
Foreign inveslrnent in Latin America and the Caribbean. 2003
3arrios and Strohl (20011
Keller and Yeaple (2002)'
2.Developing countries
.4itken and Harrison ( Cheny and Ku ( 2 0 0 ) Kathuria (2000)
Taiwan. Province
1962- 1996
Taiwan, Province
19M-t994
21
Box 1.2
L SHQATCQWltNGS I
~
The internatlnnal Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Organisation for Econonx Coopwation and Devslnprnent(OECD) have been working to i m l y the criteria used hjj thnir member countries in preparing balance-of-payments staiistics, one section nf whrch records FDI 'Bows The fifth edition ( 1993)o! the IMF Balance af Payments Manual [BPh15), proposes an integrated structure For recording economlc transactions and stocks of Lnandal assets and Iabilitics, which many countries have adopted, or a w in Ihe process of doing so Surveys on ?he degree of implementation of methodological standards for remr5tng FDI, c a n e d out by IMF and OFC3 In 1983,1991. 1997 amcl 2001, reveat steady progress in 'he adoption of these crjteria. Thc latest version of t+e sutvey liighlryhfs majo: progress in the quality of FDI slatistics -specifically I? terms of thex ava:lability (such as the use of criteria relating lo the coun:ry of o r q n and destiriativri sector of FD! flows), and coverage (e.g., Ihe inclusion of intw-enterprise loans. realestate nrcperty owned by nonresldmts. and Rxpenditure on naturalresource explomtlan, among other things). Progress. albeit kss subs'mtkl, lws also bccn made in other areas, rziduding application of the "10% rule" which fnfcrq ;1rlireninvestor relationship when fhR investor acquires 10% or more of the w i i i t j j of an enterprise Lastly, there ars o%er areas where, despite wme progress bcing made, most cntintries are nat yet fnllowhg hternatronaJ staridtlrds. for examcle Inclusinn of the activdies al firms indirectly owner: by a foreign investor, and iise nf the 'current
operating performance concept" (COPC) to evalmte the gains f r m direct investmnent Thts invclves
measurtng thc normal opcrating revenues of thc cntcrarke, before cdpllal yairls and losses. FPus1 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean haw: adopted the BpM5 guidelines. mhich results in substarhially hornogencous statistics beiriy available for the rcgicrt. A major exception is Brazil, which. despite having irnplernerited mafly of the manual's recommendations, c d y considers inter-enterprise loans and q u P q shareholdings BY curnponents of FDI. The third wmpurie:i1. reinvestment of profits, I S nut currently recorded i n Brazilian statistics. Foreign direct investmetit by country 3f origin and des'jnation secTor, does not appear in Ihe balance of payments, $0 ltre countries of the rsqlon generally recurd such data in separate statistics, if at all. 111 rnany cases. this information IS cornpiTed by nclependent foreign-investment oromoticrl agencies, whose r e c o r d q s+;mdardS diffsr frnm *ose used by their country's central bank. Accordingly, the FDI figures may nnt coincide when +hetn!a s reported in the batancc o: payments arp compared wilt1 to:als by couniry of origin, dcstlnntion sector, or both A case IR point is Chile, where FDl figures ve:y depending on whether b e y coire from the Ceritrdl Bank or the Forcrgn ent Commtftcc. a bo&{ that is endent ol the central bsnk arid a i i i ~FDI records by country and r. The Committee only classi'ies lrnent as FDI it it enters :he
under Ihp Fnrelgn Investment Statuto {about 85% of inwstmant enterity'Chirc since 1971), and it ecords its entry when the inwstrnen: agreed. t i l contras!, th? Cnrtral 3ank egislers investment flows carr ed out uridet any mechanism, not on:y tinder 5
Te; and il records them wtier
they actiially enter or leave tie cmntry. Swe:al Latin American countries have taken steps t~ improve their statistics and bring them up to intematlonal standards In Mexico, which
Is IhF! rsginn's only OECD
member, FDI statistics are prepared by Banco de MBxico and the Ministry of Economic Affairs. In crder to t ~ n i b melhodo!og;es and nhfsin intcmationally comparable statistics, since 2000 both instittitiom h a w opcratcd under commcn rulas that establish specific responsibilities tor their preparation and pubkation Form.rly Costa R i m had several institutions t3at rnaiotalned histxical records and prepxed anqusl cskmtcs and forecasts of FDI flows: but these d;d not a w y s coincide with one anotbcr owing to methodological ard ccuerage discrepancies. In 2C30 an mteragcncy group vias Created urider Ihe directicii of tl?c Ccnlral k r i k o( Costa Rica, with the key task of prepuriny statistics cn nct FDI flows entering tlte LwunYy, and adaptirry them to internationilly prevailing methodological proccdures. L a s h In Vsnezuela 'tie Central Bank has buerr iii Ihe process o f arlnpTing its balance-of-payments data to BPUS guidelines since 1N3E, bu: onty in 2003 did 17 revise. adapt a n d
very useful +or gttrriiriy 5 Setter undsrstandtng of the phenomenon in question, Itie way thcy are prepared needs to be borne in mind. along with Their wrtueu and ~ P ! E C ~ Sin, oldsr to a ~ i ('ailing d in:o csnccptual errof when ivork:ny nit :hem.
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (EGtACi, on the basis of Orgatiisatiop for E C Q ~ OCo~~C operation and OevAlnpment (OECDMnternational Monclsry Fund (IhlF). Foreigo Direct lnvesfrnerll Sf&stics. How Countries mea sur^! r D ' P W I , Washinylon, D.C.. 2003; and Xepor!on thr7 w r v s y ofr,nplernenk:m d~net11odok~gkr;l sta:sdmk for &ect mvestmont, 999; Irilerr,alwml Monetary Fund (IMF), Baknce of paynrrnrs sfahsirus ICD W M I , Decernbor 2003
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
23
In recent years, in the context of preparing the annual reports on foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, the research programme of the Unit on Investment and Corporate Strategies, of the Division of Production, Productivity and Management has shown that a useful way to combine these separate, and sometimes conflicting viewpoints is by analysing the corporate strategies that lead TNCs to invest in developing countries. Thus, based on the original model of corporate strategies prepared by John Dunning (1980,
1988), an analytical framework has been developed for the purpose of understanding the factors that determine FDI inflows. Table I. 1 shows that there are at least four main motivations for FDI, ranging from the most traditional, such as the search for natural resources and markets for goods and services, to more modern and complex goals such as the search for efficiency through international operations or pursuit of strategic assets relating to the presence of a technological or scientific base, or both.
Table 1.1 DETERMINANTS OF FDI IN RECIPIENT COUNTRIES, BY CORPORATE STRATEGY FDI strategy
Main determinants
Natural-resource-seeking
Abundance and quality of natural resources Access to natural resources Trends in international commodity prices Environmental regulation ~~~~
Local-market-seeking (national or regional)
Size, pace of growth and market purchasing power Level of tariff and non-tariff protection Entry barriers Existence and cost of local suppliers Market structure (competitors) Sectoral regulation
Efficiency-seeking (to capture export markets)
Access to export markets Quality and cost of human resources Quality and cost of physical infrastructure Services logistics Quality and cost of suppliers International trade agreements and foreign investment protection
Technological-asset-seeking
Presence of specific assets needed by the firm Scientific and technological base Scientific and technological infrastructure Intellectual property protection
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
The Unit on Investment and Corporate Strategies of the Division of Production, Productivity and Management has used this simple, yet penetrating analytical framework to describe the characteristics of FDI and interpret the corporate strategies pursued by TNCs in Latin America (see table 1.2). The search for natural resources occurs mainly in the Andean Community and Argentina (hydrocarbons and mining), in Chile (mining), and in Trinidad and Tobago (oil and gas). Market-seeking strategies predominate in the region’s largest countries.
In the case of goods, the main examples are the automotive industry in MERCOSUR, and the food, beverages and tobacco industry in Argentina, Brazil and Mexico. In the services sector, the leading areas are finance, telecommunications, retail trade and energy infrastructure in a variety of countries, especially in South America. Lastly, the efficiency-seeking strategy is concentrated in Mexico (the automotive, electronics and apparel industries) and in the Caribbean Basin (apparel).
24
ECLAC
Table 1.2 LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN: THE STRATEGIES OF TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS Cor porate strategy and sector Goods
Natural-resourceseeking
Local-market-seeking (national or regional)
Petroleum and gas:
Automotive: MERCOSUR Chemicals: BraziI Food industry: Argentina,
Automotive: Mexico Electronics: Mex¡co
Brazil, Mexico Beverages: Argentina, Brazil, Mexico Tobacco: Argentina, Brazil, Mexico
Apparel: Caribbean
Andean Community, Argentina, Trinidad and Tobago Mining: Chile, Argentina, Andean Community
Services
Tourism: Mexico and Caribbean Basin
Efficiency-seeking to capture export markets
Finance: Mexico, Chile, Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Brazil Telecommunications: Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Peru, VenezueIa Retail trade: Brazil, Argentina, Mexico Electric power: Colombia, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Central America Gas distribution: Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Bolivia
Technologicalasset-seeking
and Caribbean Basin Basin and Mexico
Business services: Costa Rica
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
In the course of preparing successive editions of Foreign Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, qualitative and quantitative research, of a significant and substantive nature, has been conducted to analyse the situation of various recipient countries (Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Argentina and the Andean Community), a number of investor countries (United States, Japan, Spain and the European Union as a whole), and some of the main industries of the region in which FDI is present (automotive, apparel, telecoms, hydrocarbons and financial services), all of which have been accorded chapters in previous editions of this report. Based on those studies, supported by statistical data on FDI flows and information available on TNC operations, and placing all of this in the context of the corporate strategies mentioned above, a simplified framework can be constructed for FDI and TNC activities in the region, in which the most salient feature is the existence of “two worlds”:
In Mexico and the Caribbean Basin, FDI essentially reflects a TNC strategy that seeks efficiency to conquer external markets, by integrating local productive platforms into regional or international production systems. The countries in this subregion have cost centres both in high-tech (electronics and automotive) and in lower technology industries (apparel). The new patterns of competition in various industries encouraged firms to seek out the productive locations offering the lowest costs, and geographic locations that were specially favourable for large-scale exporting. The aim of the firms was to bring about a form of internationalization that would keep them in a competitive regional and global position, while they also took advantage of special access to the main markets available to Mexico (since the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement, NAFTA) and the Caribbean Basin. This resulted in a significant improvement in
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
25
international competitiveness,’ especially in Mexico, and the emergence of dynamic trading sectors, such as the automotive, electronics and garment industries, destined mainly for the United States market. In South America, FDI was basically established through TNCs implementing strategies in pursuit of natural resources and markets for services. The first of these was implemented mainly in the Andean Community countries and in Chile, given their highquality natural resources and regulatory frameworks that favoured foreign investors. This fostered a relative increase in international competitiveness, albeit largely restricted to products that command low prices in world trade. The services-marketseeking strategy, meanwhile, was applied in the telecoms, energy, infrastructure and finance subsectors, especially in the MERCOSUR countries and Chile. Deregulation and liberalization of activities, wide-ranging privatization programmes and an active strategy by new international operators
were key factors in this phenomenon. This type of FDI produced significant improvements in systemic competitiveness2in these economies and, despite not directly affecting their international competitiveness, provided an opportunity to further the development of new export-oriented productive activities. This view of FDI and TNC activities can be used as the basis for interpreting the following sections of this chapter, which describe the dominant trends in both investment flows and TNC activities, and provide a more detailed consideration of two of the main corporate strategies -the search for natural resources and the search for local markets for goods and services- which are not addressed in depth in the other chapters of this report. Chapter I1 is devoted to the efficiency-seeking strategy in Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Honduras and Jamaica. Chapter I11 also analyses this type of strategy, but focuses on the changes experienced by the global automotive industry and their implications for the two main FDI poles connected with this activity in the region, namely Brazil and Mexico.
B. RECENT FDITRENDS IN LATIN AMERICA ANDTHE CARIBBEAN I . Foreign direct investment worldwide
The year 2003 witnessed a halt to the downward trend of global FDI flows seen during the two previous years, with volumes holding steady roughly at their 2002 levels. Preliminary figures published by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), estimate worldwide FDI at nearly US$653 billion for 2003 (see table 1.3). This static result at the global level, however, is the outcome of diverging trends among the various regions, country groupings and individual economies. Among the developed countries, the United States -which in the last two years suffered
the steepest reduction in net FDI inflows- in 2003 recorded a vigorous recovery that compensated for the general decline in investment flows that affected all other developed economies. In the developing world, Latin America and the Caribbean has been the only region in which FDI continued to retreat -for the fourth straight year and at a still significant pace- whereas flows picked up in both Asia and Africa. In the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, FDI maintained the rising trend it has displayed since the early 1990s.
International competitiveness reflects the force of a country’s exports, which can be measured by their share of imports in the leading markets of the world. The term “systemic competitiveness” refers to the services and infrastructure in a given economy that support export activity without directly generating exports themselves. Systemic competitiveness directly affects the logistics of TNC activities, and hence also their location decisions.
26
ECLAC
Table 1.3 REGIONAL DISTRIBUTION OF NET FDI INFLOWS WORLDWIDE, 1991-2003 (Billions of dollars)
World total Developed countries Western Europe European Union Germany France United Kingdom Other Western European countries North America Canada United States Other developed countries Japan Developing count r¡es Latin America and the CaribbeanC Africa Asia and the Pacific China Central and Eastern Europe
19911996a
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003b
254.3 154.6
481.9 269.7
686.0 472.3
1 079.1 824.6
1 393.0 1 120.5
91.o 87.6 4.8 18.4 16.5
139.3 127.9 12.2 23.2 33.2
263.0 249.9 24.6 31 .O 74.3
496.2 475.5 55.8 46.5 84.2
709.9 683.9 203.1 43.3 130.4
823.8 589.4 400.8 389.4 33.9 55.2 62.0
651.2 460.3 384.4 374.4 38.0 51.5 24.9
653.1 467.0 345.8 341.8 36.4 36.3 23.9
3.4 53.4 6.6 46.8 10.2 0.9 91.5 27.1 4.6 59.4 25.5 8.2
11.4 114.9 11.5 103.4 15.5 3.2 193.2 73.3 10.7 109.1 44.2 19.0
13.1 197.2 22.8 174.4 12.0 3.2 191.3 82.0 8.9 100.0 43.8 22.5
20.7 308.1 24.7 283.4 20.3 12.7 229.3 108.3 12.2 108.5 40.3 25.1
26.0 380.8 66.8 314.0 29.9 8.3 246.1 95.4 8.5 142.1 40.8 26.4
11.4 172.8 28.8 144.0 15.8 6.2 209.4 83.7 18.8 106.8 46.8 25.0
10.0 50.6 20.6 30.0 25.3 9.3 162.1 56.0 11.0 95.0 52.7 28.7
4.0 97.7 11.1 86.6 23.5 7.5 155.7 42.3 14.4 99.0 57.0 30.3
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), World lnvestment Report 2003. FDI Policies for Development: National and lnternational Perspectives (UNCTADNVIR/2003), New York/Geneva. United Nations publication, Sales No: E.03.11.D.8, 2003; and for preliminary 2003 figures, Global FDl decline bottoms out in 2003,Press Release, 12 January 2004. a Annual averages. Preliminary figures. The figures for Latin America and the Caribbean include financial centres.
The fact that global FDI flows have not recovered more strongly, following the steep falls recorded in 2001 (41 %) and 2002 (2 1%), and despite the recovery in the world economy in 2003, is the result of the persistent decline in transborder merger and acquisition activity, which had been the driving force behind FDI growth in the 1990s. According to UNCTAD, such operations decreased in 2003, by 25% in amount and by 7% in number, to reach their lowest levels since 1998. In developed countries there was a 1% increase in net FDI inflows, in developing countries a 4% decline,
and in Central and Eastern Europe a 6% expansion. In the first case, the slight increase is wholly explained by the performance of FDI in the United States, where its 2003 level virtually tripled the 2002 figure to reach US$86 billion. In the other developed countries, declines were widespread, albeit heterogeneous: 10% in the European Union, 20% in Japan and 46% in Canada. Among developing countries, those of Latin America and the Caribbean as a whole were again the worst hit, posting a 25% decline. The countries of Asia and the Pacific, in contrast, recorded an increase of 4%, while flows to Africa were up by 3 1%.
27
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
2. Foreign direct investment in Latin America and the Caribbean:
flows and trends In 2003 net FDI flows into Latin America and the Caribbean declined sharply for the fourth year running, this time by an estimated 19%, falling to a level of US$36.466 b i l l i ~ nThis . ~ figure represents around 60% of the annual average entering the region in the second half of the 1990s (see table 1.4). The behaviour of FDI was very similar across subregions in 2003, since the fall in relation to the 2002 figure approached 19% both in the Mexico, Central America and Caribbean zone, and also in South America. In the first-mentioned group of countries, which have been the leading destination for TNCs following an efficiency-seeking strategy, FDI has maintained very similar levels to the average recorded in 1995- 1999. In South America, however, where it has responded to natural-resource-seeking strategies (especially in the Andean Community and Chile) and market-seeking strategies (particularly MERCOSUR and Chile), FDI in 2003 amounted to 47% of the 1995-1999 average. In this second group of countries, a deterioration
in macroeconomic conditions undermined domestic demand, which, when compounded by the financial problems experienced by a number of the parent companies of international firms present in the region, caused foreign firms to postpone new business initiatives. The steep fall in FDI flows to Latin America from 1999 onwards has meant that these are no longer sufficient to compensate for the negative balance of financial flows observed since 1996. The net resource transfer (NRT) towards the region turned positive in 1991 -for the first time since 1981- reflecting the return of capital flows, both financial and FDI. In 1996, however, financial flows started to have a negative effect on the balance of payments, although the net resource transfer remained positive until 1998 thanks to the dynamism of FDI. The retreat of the latter began in 2000, and from 2002 onward it has been unable to offset the transfer of financial flows abroad (see figure 1.1).
Table 1.4 LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN: NET FDI INFLOWS, BY SUBREGION, 1990-2003 a
(Millions of dollars) 1990-1994b
1995-199gb
2000
2001
2002
2003c
Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean
6 845
15 414
20 427
31 006
18 499
14 939
South America
8 930
45 534
57 716
38 528
26 480
21 527
15 775
60 948
78 143
69 534
44 979
36 466
Total
Source: Economic Commissionfor Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC),on the basis of balance-of-paymentstatistics published by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and data from official sources in the respective countries. The figures differ from those presented in Preliminary Overview of the Economies of Latin America and the Caribbean, 2002 (ECLAC, 2002a), since that document records investment in the reporting economy, less direct investment carried out by residents of that economy abroad. a Figures do not include financial centres. Net FDI inflows correspond to FDI inflows in the reporting economy, minus capital taken out of the country by the same foreign firms. Annual average. Estimates based on information provided by central banks.
This report does not consider statistics on net FDI inflows to tax havens and/or financial centres in the Caribbean, because the data suffers from problems of quality, coverage and possible double-counting.
28
ECLAC
Figure 1.1 LATIN AMERICA AMDTHE CARIBBEAN: NET RESOURCETRANSFER, 1980-2OD3 (Percentages O [ GDP at current prices)
NRT from FDI
b
3
2 1
O -1
-2 -3
-4 NRT from financial nowsC
-5 -6 80
81
82 83
84
85 86 87
88
89
W
91
92
93
94 95
96
97 98
99
O0
O1
02 0 3 d
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). Preliminary Ovwvlew of the Econurnf'esof Lalin America and the Caribbean, 2003 (LUG 2223-P}, Saniiagq Chile. United Nations publicahon, Sales No E.03.1l.G.186, December 2003. TO calculate the net resource transfer (NRT), the balance on the income account (net payments In respect of FDE praflts, dlvidends from portfolio investments and Interest payments) is subtracted from thc balance of total capital flows. The latter carresponds to the balanbe on the capltal and financial account, plus errors and missions, loans, and Ihe use of IMF credits and exceptional flnancing Nagalive flgures indicale resource transfers abroad. Equivalent lo the balance of foreign direct Investment (FUI) less net profit remittances. CEquivalentto the balance of other capital, excluding FDI, les5 net dividend payments on portfolio investments and interest payments. Preliminary estimate. Figure 1.2 LATIN AMERICA ANDTHE CARIBBEAN: NET FDI INFLOWS AND OUTFLOWS OF FDI-RELATED INCOME, 1990-2003 (Billions of dollars)
w.0 7
1
80.0
70.0
60.0
9.0 &.O
30.0
m.0 100-
0.0
1-
I
1
1
1990 ira91 i w z 1993 1994 1995 1996 1 9 9 $998 im 2 m
I
*Re!
FOI inflow&
*NEt
mi m z
20u3
FDI O I J I I I O ~
Source: Economtc Commissian lor Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of balance-of-payments statistics published by the Internalfanat Monetary Fund (IMF). Notes The figure for net FD1 inflows only includes foreign direct investment entering the reporting econnmy, minus capilal taken wt 01 Ihe country by the same fareign firms. It does not include FD1 made abroad by residents of the reporting economy. which was included in figure 1.1 The figures for ouflows 01 FDI-related income only consider net divldends sent by foreign firms abroad, aml not net dividends received by residents of the reporting economy, which were considered in figure I 1 . Figures corresponding to 2003 are estimates.
Foreign investment in Latin America and Ihe Caribbean, 2003
29
The trend 01"riel FDI i r i f l c l w x to thc rcgion, on the otie tinnd. and thc net nuiffow o f FDI-related income, the other, show that from 2UoO onwad the prevailing patteni of the 1990s has bccn rcvcrsed (see figure 1.2). Net inflows have d e c l m d substantially, while net outflows have gr t w t i . Allhnugh foreign firms are investrng less in the region, they have not cut back 011 the dividends they send abroad: h c Icwl of which has fluctuated aromd US$ 20 billion since 1Y97. In sectoial terms, services havc hccn the main clexbnation for FDI in recent years; in 1996-2002 this sector absorbed about 57% of tQtd FDI, followed by manufacturing ('38%) and Ihc primary sector (lS%). Starting in 2001. however. FDI In services began to decline, and a substantial drop was recorded in 2002;
prcliminary esiimates suggest that this trend has been maintained m 2003 (see hgure 1.3) Accordingly, FDI flows towards Latin Anierica have bccn h c a v i l y influcnccil hy the dynamic of the services sector, the behaviour of which explains both the vigorous expansion recordcd in thc 1990s and also its abrupt decline from 1999 onward. As regards the inarn investor counlries in the regioti, thc In largeqt are all developed economies and members of the Organisation foi Econoniic Co-
opeiatioii and Development (OECT)).The United States ih in first place, accounting for 3 2 8 of the total, followed by Spain, with 19% (see figure 1.41. The Nelherlands, Frauce and the Unitcd Kingdom lead the next group. E u r n p a n Union coiintnes significnntly increased their presence as from the second half of the 1990s.
Figure 1.3 LATIN AMERICA ANDTHE CARIBBEAN: NET FDI INFLOWSTQTHE LEADING ECONOMIES, BY SECTOR, 1996-2002 a
(Pwcentages)
7m 7
I
2001
IRaw rna!erials
Manulactuws
2:.:u2
B Sewices
Source: Economic Commission tor Latin America and the Caribbean (ECPAC), on the basis of figures provided by the central banks of the respective countries, except in the case of Chile where the data are supplied by the Foreign Investment Cornmitree ;1The six l~adlng recipient countries are Brazil, Mexrco, Argentina, Chile, Venezuela and Colombla. These countries captured 83% 01 net FBI flows to Latin America and the Caribbean (excluding financial centres) during the period 1996-2002
30
ECLAC
Figure 1.4 THETEN LEADING INVESTOR COUNTRIES INTHE SIX LEADING FDI RECIPIENT COUNTRIES, 1996-2002'
(Percenrages) United Siales Spain Metherlands Fmncc
United Kingdom
Canada Portugal
Garnany .Japan Italy 09;
5%
10%
20%
!5%
25%
30%
35%
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of figures provided by the central banks of the respective countries, except in the case ot Chile where the figures are supplied by the Foreign Investment Committee. a The six leading recipient countrles are: Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Venezuela and Cdombia.Thesa countries captured 83% of net FDI flows to Latin America and the Caribbean (excluding linancial centres) during the period 1996-2002.
Tablc I 5 MEXICO, CENTRAL AMERICA ANDTWE CARIBBEAN: NET IN WARD FDE, 19W-2002' (nAi(liens
199019945
Mexico Central America Costa Rica El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Nicamgua
Panama The Carlbbeana Jamaica Daminlcan Republic Trinidad and Tohagn Other Tola I
5 430 575 222 12 88 41
20 192 840
I t 398 2 067 A81 282 213 120 194
777
124
1949 285
171
594
270 274
550 51 9 f 5 414
6 845
of d o k m ) 2000
200 1
2002
P003c
16 449 1964
26 569 2 O17 454
14 435 1354
10?3t 5 742
662 208
465 140 1O4 PI 6 241
409
173 230 2B2
2o :
456 195
110 143 174
267
1 so
603 2 o14 46FI 953 472 121 20 427
513
57
2 420
2ffO
61 4 1 D79 685
481 961 737
42 31 006
531 18 499
576 2 466
500 700 700 566 14 939
Source Fmnomic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of balance-of-payments statistics published by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and data from official sources in the respective counlries. Figures for 2003 are estimates based on information provided by central banks. The figures shown in this table dtfer f r ~ mthose presented in Preliminary Omrview of fhe Economies of Larrn America and the Caribbean, 2002 (ECLAC. 2002a), siiice that document records investment In the reporting economy, minus direct investment carried out by residents of that economy a
abroad Excluding financial centres Net FDI inflows correspond te grass inflows in the reporting country, minus capital taken out of the country by the same foreign firms. Annual average. Estimates, except fDr Mexico.
31
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
(a) Foreign direct investment in Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean Mexico Net FDI inflows to Mexico shrank for the second straight year in 2003, to reach US$ 10.731 billion -down by 26% on the previous year’s figure, although very close to the average for the five-year period 1995-1999 (see table 1.5).There are two key factors explaining the retreat of FDI from its 2002 level. Firstly, the process of market penetration by foreign banks that had begun in 2000 culminated in 2002 with foreign control of over 90% of the country’s banking system (ECLAC, 2003a, chapter 111). Secondly, competition from Asian countries, especially China, for FDI seeking lower costs in order to improve competitiveness in the United States market, prevented the upturn in that country from generating a more substantial increase in investment flows to exportprocessing zones in Mexico. Even so, in 2003 Mexico was still the leading FDI recipient in Latin America and Caribbean, ahead of Brazil. A sectoral breakdown shows that investment flows have mostly been channelled to the manufacturing sector, especially since the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994 (see appendix table I-A.2). The financial sector also became a major pole of attraction from 2000 onward, resulting in a wave of foreign takeovers of Mexican financial institutions, in which the leading players were Citicorp and the Spanish banks, Santander Central Hispano and Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (ECLAC, 2003a, chapter 111). Foreign direct investment flows diminished in these sectors in 2003. Flows to the services sector shrank by 36% compared the 2002 figure, and an even steeper fall of 57% was recorded in flows to the financial sector. In manufacturing industry, export assembly activities have aroused major interest among foreign investors since the signing of NAFTA -especially in the automotive, electronics and clothing segments. The geographic location of Mexico continues to represent a major advantage for foreign investors eyeing the North American market, and this has been boosted by the
significant upturn in economic growth in the United States and a consequent increase in shipments to that country. Nonetheless, Mexican industry still faces major challenges, including competition from China as an FDI destinatio~.~ As regards the leading investor countries, Mexico is highly dependent on the United States, which has invested a cumulative net total of US$ 70.579 billion between 1996 and 2003, representing 66% of total net flows to the country. The next largest investors are the Netherlands (9%), followed by Spain (6%) and the United Gngdom (4%) (see table I-A.2). The five leading investor countries accounted for 87% of net FDI flows entering Mexico.
Central America and the Caribbean Total FDI inflows to Central America and the Caribbean in 2003 are estimated at US$ 4.2 billion, which represents growth of 4% compared to the previous year’s figure and also with respect to the 19961999 average (see table 1.5). As from the rnid-l980s, several countries in this subregion began to receive investments from foreign firms seeking to exploit: (i) the incentives offered by export processing zones and preferential access to the United States market for exports with a high North American content; and (ii) low labour costs to improve their competitiveness in the United States market. Several assembly firms were established as a result, mainly in the apparel industry. In 2003, economic recovery in the United States gave a renewed boost to exports by these firms, which had suffered a sharp slowdown since late 2000. Nonetheless, the countries of this subregion, the vast majority of which have specialized in the labourintensive assembly industry, will soon have to face profound changes in the international arena, as a result of competition from Asian countries, especially China, and the ending of the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing of the World Trade Organization (WTO), which abolishes import quotas as from 1 January 2005. Chapter I1 of this report makes a detailed analysis of the cases of Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Honduras and Jamaica.
In order to restore competitiveness to the maquila export industry (MEI), the Government of Mexico issued a new decree reforming the law on ME1 development and operations entitled “Diverso para el Fomento y Operación de la IME”. The new decree takes note of the key demands made by maquila-sector representatives, including a request for correct definition of the terms “maquila controller” and “maquila operation”, in order to resolve ambiguities; abolition of the requirement to present the rental contract for future plant location; and extension of the exemptions granted under NAFTA Article 303 to indirect exports, rather than direct ones alone (Comercio Exterior, 2004).
32
ECLAC
(b) Foreign direct investment in South America
MERCOSUR Net FDI flows to Brazil in 2003 amounted to US$ 10.144 billion, which marks a fall of 39% compared to the previous year’s figure and was 47% below the average for the five-year period 1995-1999 (see table 1.6). As a result, Brazil dropped to second place behind Mexico in the region’s FDI recipient ranking. The are several factors behind this sharp decline: firstly, the country has suffered a reduction in its foreign-currency
purchasing power, as result of the steep devaluation of the real and the economic slowdown that has undermined demand and discouraged FDI targeting the domestic market; secondly, the crisis that privatized public utilities have been enduring since 2001 worsened further in 2003. Since the second half of the 1990s, the public-utilities sector had been the main focus of investor interest (see appendix table I-A.2). In an initial phase the sector received large privatization-related flows, and then this was followed up by investments to fulfil the commitments entered into with the regulatory authorities.
Table 1.6 SOUTH AMERICA: FDI INFLOWS, 1990-2003 a (Millions of dollars)
Chile MERCOSUR Argentina Brazil Paraguay Uruguay Andean Community Bolivia Colombia Ecuador Peru VenezueIa TOTAL
19901994b
19951999b
1 207 4 880 3 027 1 703 99 51 2 843 85 818 303 80 1 836 8 930
5 401 30 188 10 599 19 240 185 164 9 945 71 1 2 796 639 2 350 3 449 45 534
2000
2001
2002
2003c
4 860 43 590 10 418 32 779 119 274
4 200 25 039 2 166 22 457 95 320 9 289 706 2 500 1 330 1 070 3 683 38 528
1 888 17 496 775 16 566 -22 177 7 096 677 1 974 1 275 2 391 779 26 480
2 982 11 397 1103 10 144 19 131 7 148 357 1291 1 637 1 332 2 531 21 527
9 266 736 2 299 720 81O 4 701 57 716
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of balance-of-payments statistics published by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and data from official sources in the respective countries. Figures for 2003 are estimates based on information provided by central banks. The figures shown in the table differ from those presented in Preliminary Overview of the Economies of Latin America and the Caribbean, 2002 (ECLAC, 2002a), because that document records investment in the reporting economy, minus direct investment carried out by residents of that economy abroad. a Figures correspond to FDI inflows in the reporting economy, minus capital taken out of the country by the same foreign firms. Annual average. Estimates, except for Brazil, Chile, Peru and Venezuela.
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
33
The trend of sectoral flows in 1996-2003 shows that 72% of FDI in Brazil was channelled to the services sector, basically telecommunications and electricity, the former a result of the privatization of TelecomunicaGGes Brasileiras (Telebrás), while 24% was absorbed by manufacturing, largely in the automotive sector (see appendix table A-1.1). In 2003 the services sector lost further ground as an FDI target, continuing the trend that had begun in 2001. Having absorbed 80% of flows in 1996-2000, the sectoral share had shrunk to 35% by 2003. In contrast, manufacturing industry, which had accounted for an average of 18% of net FDI inflows between 1996 and 2000, saw its share expand to 36% between 2001 and 2003. With regard to FDI-origin countries, there is greater diversification in Brazil than in the case of Mexico. The United States is the leading investor country, accounting for 22% of the total (see appendix table A-I. 1); Spain is ranked second (17%), followed by the Netherlands (1 1%). The five leading investor countries account for 68% of total FDI in Brazil. Net FDI inflows to Argentina in 2003 are estimated at US$ 1.1 billion, representing a 42% rise on the previous year’s figure, but just 10% of the average amount received in 1995-1999 (see table 1.6). In fact, net inflows in 2002 and 2003 -which slumped to late-1980s levels- are a long way from the annual average of US$ 7.8 billion recorded between 1991 and 2000. As mentioned in the previous report on foreign investment in the region, this steep decline reflected the crisis the country has been going through, characterized by restrictions on withdrawals of bank deposits and foreign-currency remittances abroad, and then, with the ending of the convertibility regime in January 2002, by a steep devaluation of the local currency and a freeze on publicutility charges. During 2003 the restrictions on bank deposits have been gradually lifted, foreign-exchange controls have been eased, and monetary reunification has begun by redeeming the quasi-currencies issued by the provinces during the crisis. In addition, presidential elections were held, and the new Government signed an agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in September. Despite the initial demands of the Fund, in this agreement the authorities refused to make any commitment on public service charges or any adjustment timetable. The sharp 10.9% contraction in the economy in 2002 was followed by a robust recovery
of 8% in 2003, leading to an improvement of the country’s risk perception. As mentioned in the previous edition of this report, although the crisis in Argentina hurt all foreign firms, its effects were not uniform. Firms that had invested with a view to the national or regional market, or both, were the worst hit, by a combination of two factors: currency devaluation among the countries of the region, in particular the Argentine peso and the Brazilian real, and a weakening of domestic demand as a result of the crisis. Secondly, public-utility firms found themselves trapped with liabilities in dollars, stemming from the loans with which they had financed their rapid expansion in the 1990s, and a steep fall in their incomes, resulting from the freeze on prices, devaluation, and the slump in demand. Investments linked to the search for natural resources for export -hydrocarbons and miningemerged relatively unscathed from the domestic crisis; and devaluation has actually favoured certain traditional exports, such as agriculture. In 2002, therefore, FDI flows were negative in the services sector and positive in manufacturing, mining and hydrocarbons. In the latter case, FDI was maintained at the average levels seen since 1992, except for 1999 when Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales (YPF) was sold (ECLAC, 2000). As regards investor countries, Spain is the leader with a 43% share of total FDI flows in 1996-2002 (see appendix table I-A.2), as a result of an investment wave driven by large firms such as Repsol-YPF, Telefónica de España and others (ECLAC, 2002b). Some way behind come the United States (12%) and the Netherlands (10%); the five largest investor countries accounted for 76% of FDI in this period. In 2002, however, investment flows from this group of countries were negative, reflecting the deteriorating FDI climate (see appendix table I-A.2).
Chile Net FDI flows to Chile in 2003 posted a vigorous 58% recovery following their 55% slump in 2002. Although this growth is significant, the level of inflows, on the order of US$ 3 billion, amounts to no more than 55% of the annual average recorded in 1995-1999 (see table 1.6). Chile has the most stable economy in Latin America and is the region’s best rated country in terms of corruption, competitiveness, general business climate and risk rating.5 Since 2002, Chile has signed three free
The authorities of this country consider that the slackening of FDI flows may partly be explained by foreign firms’ seeking funding locally rather than abroad.
34
ECLAC
trade agreements, giving it improved access to several important markets: the United States, the European Union and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA).6 In 2003 it also signed double taxation conventions with Spain and the United Kingdom; in early 2004 it approved a free trade agreement with the Republic of Korea; and negotiations are ongoing for a trilateral trade treaty with Singapore and New Zealand. Estimates for 2003 are even more encouraging. A significant proportion of FDI inflows has taken the form of mergers and acquisitions; and the authorities hope that the signing of free trade agreements will provide an additional incentive for foreign investors to choose Chile as a service platform (ECLAC, 2002b, p. 34). There have been two major poles of attraction for FDI in Chile: the primary sector, of interest to TNCs seeking natural resources; and the services sector, which attracts firms pursuing a strategy of local and regional market penetration (ECLAC, 2000). In the first half of the 1990s, the mining sector accounted for the bulk of FDI. In the second five years, however, the services sector, basically energy, telecommunications and banking, took over as the main destination (see appendix table I-A.l). It is worth noting that Chilean assets are relatively expensive when measured in dollar terms, so TNCs face high entry costs, for example in the retail trade sector where local players have a strong presence. The United States and Spain have been the predominant investor countries, accounting for 25% and 24% of total flows in 1996-2003, respectively (see appendix table IA.2). In that period, the five leading investor countries generated 78% of total FDI flows.
Andean Community FDI inflows to Andean Community countries totalled an estimated US$7.148 billion in 2003, which represents growth of just 1% compared to the previous year’s figure, but a reduction of 28% with respect to the average for 1995-1999 (see table 1.6). The increase in FDI occurred despite major political crises in two member countries, which had serious repercussions on their economic performance. The trends in investment flows have been varied, expanding in Venezuela and Ecuador, but declining in Bolivia, Colombia and Peru (ECLAC, 2003a, chapter 11).
’
Net FDI flows to Bolivia in 2003 are estimated at US$ 357 million 4 7 % less than the 2002 figure and 50% below the 1995-1999 average. This retreat is mainly explained by the low level of investment in the hydrocarbons sector, which between 1996 and 2002 captured just under 50% of all FDI inflows. This negative trend is associated with political problems and uncertainty surrounding the natural gas sector (see box 1.5). The United States is the leading investor country, providing 34% of flows in 1996-2002; next comes Argentina -basically as a result of operations carried out by Repsol-YPF; and then Brazil, Italy and Spain, each with shares of around 10% (see appendix table I-A.2). In Colombia, net FDI inflows shrank by 35% in 2003, to a level far below the average recorded in 19951999 (see table 1.6). The services sector was the leading FDI destination in the second half of the 1990s; but since 2001 that sector has lost much of its attractiveness, and primary activities (hydrocarbons and mining) have become the main recipients, in a trend that consolidated further in the first quarter of 2003 (see appendix table I-A.1). In origin terms, investments come mainly from Spain (25%) and the United States (9%) (see appendix table I-A.2).7 In Ecuador, the net FDI inflow in 2003 amounted to US$ 1.637 billion, which represented a 28% increase, thereby confirming the rising trend displayed since the early 1990s (see table 1.6). Investments by transnational petroleum companies largely explain the FDI channelled to this country. In 1996-2002, the primary sector, dominated by oil activities, has absorbed 85% of total FDI (see appendix table I-A.1). The United States is the leading investor country, with a 34% share in 1996-2002, followed by Canada, with 24%. The five leading investor countries accounted for 75% of total FDI in the period (see appendix table I-A.2). In Peru, net FDI flows in 2003 totalled US$ 1.332 billion, equivalent to 43% of the average amount entering the country in 1995-1999, but down by 44% compared to the 2002 figure. This steep fall in FDI flows does not reflect the profusion of FDI projects in natural resources (hydrocarbons and mining) observed in 2003. During the past year, Peru signed a free trade agreement with MERCOSUR, which admitted it as an associate member of the bloc on the same basis as Bolivia and Chile. In the
Consisting of Liechtenstein, Iceland, Norway and Switzerland. Excluding oil investments, Spain and the United States have shares of 18% and 17%, respectively.
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
35
investment area the agreement seeks to encourage the signing of reciprocal investment promotion and protection conventions, in addition to a double taxation agreement. The aim here is to encourage investment between the countries of the bloc, in order to facilitate trade and technology flows. The Venezuelan economy registered an unprecedented contraction in 2003, on the order of 9.5%, as result of the strike called by opposition political parties and business entities, which lasted from December 2002 until February 2003. In addition, the imposition of stringent price and foreign-exchange controls have caused difficulties for firms that have to carry out their transactions in foreign currency. Despite this climate of economic and political instability, FDI flows to Venezuela grew more than threefold to reach US$ 2.531 billion in 2003, which marks a return to levels near those achieved in 1995-1999, following the steep fall that occurred in 2002 (see table 1.6). Nonetheless, about 30% of that amount corresponds to investments by Compañía Anónima Nacional Teléfonos de Venezuela (CANTV), owned by Verizon Communications of the United States, that were actually made in 1996 but only registered in June 2003.8 In sectoral terms, the hydrocarbons area has been the strongest pole of attraction for foreign investors. Since partially opening up to foreign investment in the early 1990s, which was boosted in 1995 by the possibility of entering strategic partnerships with Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), this sector has become the country’s leading FDI recipient. In fact, 49% of FDI flows have targeted the primary sector, mainly in relation to hydrocarbons exploitation (see appendix table I-A. 1). In terms of investor countries, 25% of flows between 1996 and 2002 were sourced from the United States, followed by Spain which provided 9% of the total. To summarize, although statistical data on FDI in Latin America still suffer from a number of shortcomings, they nonetheless make a major contribution to understanding the phenomenon. Based on various statistical sources and weighing up the regional experience as a whole, it can be stated that FDI in 2003
continued on the same downward trend that had begun in 1999. The steepest fall occurred in the MERCOSUR countries and in the services sector, both of which were major destinations during the FDI boom of the 1990s. MERCOSUR countries had mainly absorbed marketseeking FDI channelled into the services sector, and to lesser extent manufacturing. There were also reductions, although less accentuated, in Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, which have absorbed efficiencyseeking FDI targeting the export assembly industries. In Chile, although the natural-resource-seeking strategy was very important during the first half of the 1990s, the search for services markets began to prevail from 1995 onward. In this country FDI posted a revival in 2003, although it is still far from the levels attained during 19961999. In the Andean Community, where most FDI inflows are natural-resource-seeking, flows have increased despite the major economic and political instability prevailing in some of these countries in 2003. This shows that FDI with this aim, which has scant linkage to local economies and is focused exclusively on exports, is relatively immune to domestic conditions in the host countries. Since the start of current decade, the region seems to have embarked upon a new stage marking the end of the FDI boom seen in the 1990s. This is mainly explained by the exhaustion of the privatization process and by TNC debt levels, especially among firms involved in public services, which have forced them to be more cautious in their investments. In this new phase, the amounts being invested by foreign firms are substantially smaller, but levels of repatriation abroad in respect of returns on earlier investment are equal to, or comparatively larger than during the preceding period. This is starting to raise the problem of the impact of FDI on external accounts, especially in countries where investment does not generate significant exports, such as in MERCOSUR. Looking to the future, the prospects are brighter in the international context, particularly as regards trends in the United States economy, which suggests a more encouraging outlook for FDI flows to the region.
*
CANTV reported a 1996 investment of US$ 879 million in June 2003, in order to comply with regulations established for obtaining foreign currency, according to a statement made to Dow Jones Newswires by Miriam Aguilera, director of the Foreign Investment Superintendency (El Universal, 2003).
ECLAC
36
C T H E OPERATIONS OF TRANSNATIONAL ENTERPRISES IN LATIN AMERICA ANDTHE CARIBBEAN
This section aims to show thc hrcddlh alid depth of the nngoing process of asset transnationalization i n thc economies o f 1,atin America and the Caribbean, among goods and services producers, and i n financial
institutions. This prmcss hay been particularly intensive in the public-utility and finance areas, which,, ccrtaitl precautions arc nceded when analysing this type of data (see h ~ ) 1.3). x
ND CONSIDERATION OFTNC STATISTIC
obtains in the case d wmral a lesscr extent, of IQC;II firms and their
to uver-represent the presence of foraign sidiaries in !he region. Through period covered by the ArnBrica Investmen1 and Corporate Strategies decided tu correct the siluation only in the case of Petrhleos Mexicanas (PEMEX), since this has the largest
EconomBtica, but also on ctosed
involved. Problems of double counting also occur in enteqme Sales when the parent or holding campany arid its subsrdiarkcs are cansidered at !he s a m timo ~ An
sahs volume of a parent ftm and its subsidiaries. Et was decided to k ~ e p PEMEX abne an the list and to elrminat its subsidiafies.
37
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
1. Transnational corporations
TNCs accounted for 25% of total sales, by 1999 their share had peaked at 43% (see figure IS), just at the time when FDI also reached its highest level. Starting in that year, the foreign share began to decline, coinciding with the sharp drop in FDI inflows to the region. Nonetheless, this retreat does not mean that transnational firms have lost importance - they still account for 36% of the sales of the 500 largest companies.
Ever since the 1990s, the arrival of large volumes of FDI in the region's countries has resulted in a major process of asset transnationalization among the economies of Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC, 2001). This process is revealed in the importance acquired by TNCs both in goods-producing activities and in service provision, as indicated by sales data for the 500 largest enterprises operating in the region. Whereas in 1990
Figure 1.5 LATIN AMERICA: TOTAL SALES OF THE 500 LARGEST FIRMS, BY OWNERSHIP, 1990-2002
(Percentages)
45%
f
15% 10% 5% 0%
-
I
1-
I
I
1
I
I
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
I+Private
foreign *Private
local++
State
I
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information provided by the Special Studies and Projects Department of the magazine América Economía.
Transnational corporations have gained a forceful presence both in the manufacturing sector and in services. In the first case, many medium and high-technology industries (automotive, autoparts, electronics) are largely dominated by TNCs, which have concentrated their operations in assembly plants located in Mexico to supply the North American market -and, to a lesser extent, in Brazil and Argentina, although in this case with a more
marked orientation towards the domestic market and MERCOSUR (see chapter 111). Along with medium and high-technology industries, a wide range of low-tech manufacturing industries such as clothing, also operate under the assembly-plant system, and are located both in Mexico and in the Caribbean Basin countries (see chapter I1 for the cases of Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Honduras and Jamaica).
38
ECLAC
The services sector also reveals a broad-based TNC presence, which has been growing steadily since economic reforms were implemented to privatize, deregulate and liberalize public utilities in most of the region’s countries. This was the sector that received the largest FDI inflow in the second half of the 1990s. The new regulatory context for public-utility provision allowed TNCs to gain ground steadily by purchasing State-owned assets -and sometimes businesses owned
by local private capital- mainly in the energy, telecoms, finance and infrastructure areas. This process explains the growing preponderance of service-providing TNCs, while the importance of State-owned firms has waned (see figure 1.5). It also explains the largest firms’ declining participation in the primary and manufacturing sectors, although the latter still displays the largest overall presence (see figure 1.6).
Figure 1.6 LATIN AMERICA: TOTAL SALES OFTHE 500 LARGEST FIRMS, BY SECTOR, 1990-2002
(Percentages)
10%
1
5%
f
0%
, 1990
1991
I
1992
I
1993 1994 1995
1 4 Raw materials
1996 1997 1998
1999 2000
*Manufactures +Services
2001
2002
I
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information provided by the Special Studies and Projects Department of the magazine América Economia.
The relative decline in the TNC presence since 1999 has enabled locally owned private firms to expand in a number of service areas, specifically those where foreign firms previously held a large share. The economic crises suffered by several countries in the region generated disappointing results for several firms in this sector, especially those providing non-tradable services. In crisis periods, where demand slumped across the board, the inability to redirect production towards other markets was decisive in the results of these firms, even causing some of them to withdraw altogether from the countries in which they had operations. This occurred most intensively in Argentina, where the economic crisis, compounded by social and political instability, forced a number of TNCs established in the country to refocus their strategies, and several of them closed down their operations, thereby opening up opportunities for local
enterprises to take on more active roles (see section D of this chapter). In this way, whereas in 1998-2002 only about 30% of mergers and acquisitions in the region were of an intra-border nature -investors from one country buying assets in the same country- in 2003 about half of such operations were of this type (see appendix table I-A.3). This phenomenon, in which local agents take advantage of investment opportunities such as the purchase of foreign-held assets, probably indicates that in situations of regional uncertainty local agents are better informed and more willing to take risks. Alongside these factors, the repositioning process was facilitated by the fact that several local groups were in situations of high liquidity, as a result of the previous merger and acquisitions process in which foreign firms had acquired local assets on a massive scale (see box 1.4).
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caxihbean. 2003
39
foreign capital into this seutur. making it the main krget 01 markstseeking FDI in the subregion. Burin
local enterprises, bofh prlvafe and State-onmed. Since 2002,this trend has been chaqlng hmever, with foreign seivtce providers wit+drawi and those owned by lccal capital expanding by buying the devalued
alrcady own; it paid USS 90 miliion for an opliori to buy a controlling stdhe in the Argentine operator CT Móvil, a subsidiary of V w m n
rnunicacjones da El S
in mis uecaae su mi nave Deen retail trade sectors
Guaternala. In ad purchased fhR as America in 2003.
mobth telephony busincssss i n La Amnrlca in latE: 2000. In order to prsvent the firm's finances being affmted by the investments and -esults af new busineses abroad, which raquire large volumes of
!o fruition. its cment market ence and potentiat acquisitions R America Mdvil the leading competitor of Telefbnica d e Espana n tatin Amnrlca. In March 2004, m RE
USS 760 rnliilon ?o Banca Int for Sudarneris, whik HSBC, been present in Brazil since US$ €It5 million far alt the o and assets ot thc British ban
I I iobile tehphony. Th
began trading undar Amdrrca Fduvif. The f
Canada, taking control of th which. in tum, uwned four m phme operators in Brazil. In 5! invested w e r US$ < Rlllton i acquiattion ni mohitp phonc enterprises in sevfiral Swth Ame:ican c w ntri BS, purchasing Brazilian firms BSE Sisteinas Eletrhicos Ltda. and BCP
ign operators were vigorously . integration irilo addiiroh area enetratiny h e Brazilian market. As together with the conques; of nc itioned ir1 the previarls-editim DI fcreiyil markets. The Falabella report, two Iocalfy owned banks department store Ras spearl-rcoded SM and Itati- have cxpm Pxpansion abroad, in addk antly rn the local market o g completed targc-scale the last two years, as a rcsult of bushe.% deals within Chile. Falabella actívs participation in the began to intcmationdhzs its activities privatization of wblic institutons by opening stores in the
€CLAC
40
Ccjrdoba and San Juan, and then venturing into the Peruvian market in lQ95with its purchase of Saya. In l%7, it embarked ripnn a hcrizonldl
purchases to further expand the range of tts bustnesses: the Chilean subsidiary of ING Bank, which in 1999 gave birth ;O Banco Falabetla; and 20%
: Mart MPxso. With Ihc aim of breaking into the supermarket segrncnt. in late 2003 it attempted tu purchase thfi Chilean subsidjary of the French Carrefour chain
33% of tbe Chilean subsidiary 0; the Iiome improvemcnt store The Home Depot (United States), which it now totally controls, in addiliw 10 setling up travel and insu~~ncc businesses through Viajes Falabella and Corredorlores de Seguros Falabella.
presence n both Mexico and Brazil. In 2002, i I enlered the hypermarket business in Lima, lhmugh TQttuS. Laslty, in 2003 it merged with Sodimac, a Chilean home improvement chain, and this operatrori rnakes :he new lirm t h second largest in this subsector in
following disappuiniing results (SOC !&le I-A 5 of the appendix). Nonelheiess, it was DistribuciCln y Servictos S.A. (DkS) that flnal[y landed Carretour, so Falabeh i3 now studying rimer options ir1 Zhrs arca. such as opmlng outlets m its own
stores
--
Chile”. Santiago, Chile, 30 December 2003,fslralegra,“DAS realiza aumento de c a p i k l por ?IS$28;7 mil!ones y hrrna Chile, 8 January 2004.
curnpm de Carrefour Chile”, SanHago,
Despite a selative weakening of TNC sales in the last fEW years, the consrilidated sales of the 50 largest f i r m in Latin Arnenca amounted tu ahnut US$ 220 billion in 2002 (FCC appendix table 1-11.4):in other wordl;, 29%of the total sales of the SO0 largest finns in the region, which is similar to the percentage recordcd in 1499. In the manufacturing scctor, where TNCs are basically cnriceritrated in the automotive and autciparts industry, they account for 62% u T sales of the largest 50 TNCs, thereby confirming t h c leadership o t manufacturers among the 500 largest enterprim ( S C C appendix table I-A.4). Estahhxhcd mainly in Mexrco and Brazil, from where they siipply the North American and MERCOSWR m k e t s , respecnvely, h e s e entcrprises are the leaders in salcs-volume terms. Key examples include Geneml Motors, Volkswagen, r)aimlerClrrysler.Ford and Nissan. In addition, enterprises engaged in thc autoparts trade have emcrgcd very strongIy, such as Delphi, T m r Corporation, VlStWR Corporation and TRW, Inc. (the automotivc industry is analysed in detail in chaptcr 111). Fiims in the services sector contribute 2B% of the sales of the 50 largclii TNCs, with those in the telecoms hector posting the most vigorous expansion. I n fact, ‘klef6nica de Espaiia i s curreiitly thelargest foreign firm in the region: between 1999 and 2002, its Liilaf sales inore than tripled, raising it from thiid place i n terms of salcs in 1999 to first in 2002 (see table J-A.4 cif he appendix). It has also expanricd practically throughout the contincnt, with its main operations in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru, and a prcsellce also i n Colombia. Venezucla, Mexico and a number of Central American countries.
McanwhiIe, firms such as Telecom Ttalia. MCI (formerly In’orldCom) arid Verizon, joined the list of the SO largcst transnationals in the region thariks to their operations essentidly in Brazil andkgentina. In the primary scctnr ThTs account forjust 10% of total sales, largely corresponding to hydrocarbons. This is consistent with what has been stated earlier, namely thrtt this is a sectordominated essentially by State-owned enterpriscs. The IargeTNCs operating in this activit! are firms that traditionally have had a major presence in the region, such as Royal Dutch/ShclE, ExxonMobil and ChevronTcxaco. Alongside these, Repsol-YPF is thc largest trarssnatinnaf i n [he sector, and is also the only large Spanish enterprise apcraritig outside the services scclor. In i c m c or origins, TNCs are dominated by thusc based in the United Statcs. which account for 45% of told sales of the 5U largest transnatioiials (see appendix table T-AA). Further behind come the Spanish firms, whose sales account for ahuut 20% of the total, and German cnlcrprises with 11%. The countries in which TNCs have the strongest presencc arc Mexico and Brazil. where they gencrate 53% and 31’3, respectively, of thc
sales of the 50 largest TNCs operatirig i n LatinAmerica. Firms i n the autoinolive industiy are ve.q important in both countries, but especially i n Mexico. In Brazil. meanwhilc, the services sector has also hccome imponant, with the local subsidiary of Teltf6nica de Bspafia hccrjming the largest of the TNC subsidiaries present in the region. Thc case af Argentina IS also notdhlc, given the huge reduction in its sham or the sales
41
Forelgn Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Figure 1.7 LATIH AMERICA: TOTAL SALES OFTHE 10QLARGEST SERVICE ENTERPRISES, BY OWNERSHfP, 3990.2002
(Percentages)
1391)-1g!M
U Prwate foreign
Prrvale local .State
Source: Economic Commission lor Latin America and the Caribbean (ECUC), on the basis Df information provided by the Special Studies and Projects Department of the magazine America Economia.
of the SO largest transnationals. As n resulL or thc bat1 results: obtaincd hy thc subsidiaries of these firms, which in some cases led them to abandon their operations in the country, just 6% of he salcs of thc largest TNCs were geoerakd ~n Argentina in 7,002, compared to 13% in 1999. Latin Arrierican S ~ i l crnvncrl firm F have maintained a strong posirion in the primary sector, despilite having lost snme ground as a result of privatisation processes. In fact it i s largely thanks 10 State activity io h e primary sector that these firms arc still major players among the lar@ in the region, since State-owned enreiprises had roughly a 75% share of the sales af the 25 l q c s t firms in tlie piiiuary sectur thrtiughout I99fi2002. I n the last Sew ycars, and aq result of strong international oil prices, the State share has actuallyincreased. Although lhc Statc has shed much or its old role as producer of goods and services. leaving the space vacated to foreign enterpriws. this did not happen in the hyrlmcarhens sector, where, givcn the strategic nature of this resource, the enterprises generally remained 111 Stale h a n k g The only exceptions to this pattern are Argentina, Bolivia and Peru, which primhzed their nil crmpanics in the 1990s.Accordingly, the region’s Iargest firms are to be found in seclor,
including Petr6leos Mexicanos (PEMEX), Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) and Petrdlca Braxilcirtl (Petrahras), giants which almost without exception have shared the three first places in the general list of‘ h e 5011 lar@ firms. In 2002, lhesc thrcc corporations between them accounted for over 15% ofthe total sales of this list. The phenoinenon of TNC expansion in scrvices can be seer1 m r m clearly hy considering the hundred largest Lrms in thc sector. In ttus goup, ‘TNCs have expanded vigoroiisly, whereas State-owned enterpsises have generally declined. Until IB94,TNCsaccounted for about 10% of total sales (see figure L7), with a few firms, mainly in Argentina and Brazil, operating in the rclail sector (Cantfour alid hlakro) and in tclccnms (TeltMnica de España and Tclccom M i a ) . Starting in the second half of the 1990s. however, the foreign ptxsence ¡ti Lhc services sector becamc increasingly clear. as other countries carried out large-scale pi-ivatizations. Tn addition to increasinp ir1 numhcr, their range also cxpanrled -in krms of subsectoss covered (telecoms and energy, mainly), and thc counlrics rn which they were establishing their operations. Although Argentma and Brazil continued to tic rriajor hasts far these firms. Chile and Mexico also gamed importance.
~~
The samc phcnomcnon occum in a number a f firms iii the niiniiig subseclur. such as thc State-owned CQDBLCO in Chile
ECLAC
42
The iiiost significant moves i t l u s t r a t l n g the transnationali7~~it,n cif thc scctcir iticluded the secalled “Operaci6n Verbnica” whereby, at the end of thc last rlecadc, TclcTi,nica de España consalidated its regional system by raising its equity stakc in ih Bra~ilian, Argentine and Peruvian subsidiaries to almost 100% @CY.AC, 2001). Thc lakeover of the Chilean electnc power enterprise Bnersis by Endesa España was d s o highly significant io the configuration of the regional map of the electnc power subsector, hccausc h k acquisitioii led to a series of operations to acquire energy assets in Argentina, Peru, Brasil, and elsewhere (ECLAC, 2001). In the retail trade area, the Wal-Mart sobsidia? in Mcxico cxpanded vigorously, taking over various supermarkets in that country to hecnmc a major sectoral player at both local and regional levels The entry o f Royal Ahold (Netherlands) alid Carefour (France) in the late 1990s also contributed to the r e g i r d restructuring of the sector. Nonetheless, from 1Y99 onwards, sales growth amtin:! TNCs in the services sector began to falter, and, as mentioned above, several o f them abandoned the region altogether, thereby opening up spaces for local investors (see box 14). The largest manufacturing enterprises have faced a different situation. This i s the sector in which TNCS
display a riiajor and vifluually unchanging presence, in contrast to State participation which has hccn praclically nil (see figure 1.8). Among manufacturing firms. the leaddl ng enwpri ses have p x r w i i cntl y been subsidiaries of the large automotive firms established i n R r w i l and Mcxico. such ix Geiieral Motms, DaimlerChqsler, Ford, Volkswagen, Nissan and Fiat. Othcr i m p o r h L subsectors, although way behind the automotwe group, have been the food inbrtry, with firms such as Nestlk, and computer and dectronics, involving the subsidiaries nf Sarnwng, Hcdclt-Packard, Sony aiid IBM, among others, located mainly in Mexico. The largest opcrations carried out in the maiiufacturing sector, involving the entry of new tramnational playcrs, include the purchase of Grupo Embotellador Mtxico (Gemex) by P e p d 3 in l a k 2002. The panorama in the brewing sector has also altered, with nperaticms involving regional groups, such as Cisneros (Venezuela) and Bavaria (Colombia), togeher with TNCs. including Heineken (Netherlands) and Dudweiser (United Statcs) {ECLAC, 2003b, chapter I). In March 2004, the merger between the Rmxilian hrcwcr ArriBev alid hirerbrew of Belgium created the world’s largest brewerp, pushing Anheuser-Ruhch (United States) into secorid place.
Figure 1.8 LATIN AMER1CA:TQTAt SALES OFTHE 100 LARGEST MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISES, &Y OWNERSHIP, 1990-2002
(Percentages)
60%
I
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basrs of information provided by thc Special Studies and Projects Department of the magazine A m c r m € m o m i a
Foreign investment tn Lalin Arnerica and the Caribbean, 2003
43
A n analysis of the 200 largest exporting firm in
rcsultcd in arelative los? o f share forfirms in the primary s a t o r , whose expons. although slightly more than douhling, have accnunted for a declining share of the total, shrinking from nearly 50% at the s t a t of the 1990s to 36% in the first few years of the new century. The priinaiy export sector, which plays n key role in thc cconnmies of several Soiith American countries. also displays a heavy presence of TNCs engaged i n hydrocarbons ex traction, including ChevrmTexaco, Royal DutchlShell and ExxanMobil; and in mining, whcre suhsjdiarres of BHP Billiton and Anglo American among others are operating. Although the exports of this wctor grew by 11S% over the period 1990-2002, its relative share among the 200 largest exporting f i r m has declined. given the remarkable expansion of the manufacturing share.
Latin Airierica and t h c C a r i h h m also reveals a process of transnatmnaliza~ionin the econoinies coiicemed. In h c Civc ycars 1990-2994, 25% of a12 exports were generated by TNCs, whereas 10 years later their share amounted to 42% (see figure 19). The most dynamic sector, and the one in which TNC presence is greatest, is manufacturing, which is a p h n e d largeIy by automotive and electronics activities in Mexico, and clotlririg and clectrnnics in Central America and the Cartbbean, based on an efficiency-seeking strategy. Maiiufacturirig expork virtually quadrupled between the first five years of the 19YUs and the first three y e m o f the new decade, to top US$ I I3 billion. With suchexpbsive growth, this sector’s share rn the total exports of the largest e x p d n g firms grcw from 4256 in the early 1990s to 56% in the first few years of the new milleniiiuni. This increase has alsu
Figure 1.9 LATIN AMEAICA:TOTAL EXPORTS OFTHE 200 LARGEST EXPORTING FIRMS, BY OWNERSHIP, 1990-2002
(Percentages) 45%
1
I
40% 35% 30%
25% 20% 15% 10%
5%
O
= 3 !/
23m-2002
19%-IS94 --.
QPrivate foreign
E4Prlva:e local
IStatc
-.
Source. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Carlbbean (ECLAC), on the basls of information provided by the Speclal Studies and Projects Department of the magazine Arn&ica Ecommia.
ECLAC
44
2.Transnat ionaI banIr s Banking activity has also heen whjccl to n vigorous transnationalization process, especially i n the last few years of the 1990s.Until 1995, frrcign operators had a negligible share in the total assets of the 100 largest hanks in Latin America, compared tu thcir local and Stateowncd counterparts (see figure E. 10). In the second half of the decade, however, several o f thc region’s couiitries embarked upon financial reform, aimed at strengthening and restructuring the system, to be better able to withstand the crises that may huffel i t i n the future. The aim was to enhance systemic solvency by selling local hanks to large international financial groups; but the results showed that far from helping overcome crisis situations, such a5 that suffcrcd it1 South America, in some cases international banks chose to abandon their host ccclnomies (ECLAC, 2003b, chapter 111). By 2000, the banking map in Tatin America had changed radically, and although foreign banks were still behind their local and State-owncd counterparts in asset term?, thc fnrmer group was in a honm situation while the second group was in clear retreat. Nonetheless, the explosive expansioii of foreign hanks has been reversed over the last few years, mainly
as a result o f the crises in R w d arid .4rpentina, lbthich forced several of them to close down their operations. Spanish banks. particularly Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argeiitaria (BBVA) and Banco Santander Central Hispano (SSCH), were thc key players in the purchase of domestic assets in the second half of the 199Os, and this has made them the largcsl Iraosnational banks operating in Lath America, with operations in several countries (see table 1.7). At a time whcn Spanish banks nccded to grow, BBVA and BSCH chose to expand their businesses towards Latin America, as a way of defending themselves from the progress of their European competitors (given the problem Spanish banks faced in achieving expansion i n Europe), and also to take advantage of t h e ncw poticy of financial-sectoropenness iinplemented by the region’s Governmentx. Fnr this r a w n Lakin American subsidiaries are a fundamental pillar Qf the Spanish banks’ global husincsws -unlike other largc forcign hanks, such as Citibank of the United States or?LBN A m o of the Netherlands, for which Latin American operations rcprcscnt only a rninor part oftheir worldwide activity (ECLAC. 2003b, chapter 11).
Figure !,ID LATIN AMERICA: THE 1OQ LARGEST BANKS, BY ASSETS AND TYPE OF OWNERSHIP, ic m -2003’ (Fercentagas)
1991-10gY;
39996-1998
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAG), on the basis of information provided by the Special Studies and Projects Department of the magazine ArnBnca Economiir. a Figures correspond to data for the first half of 2003
45
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 1.7 LATIN AMERICA: LARGEST FOREIGN BANKS BY CONSOLIDATED ASSETS, FIRST HALF OF 2003 (Millions of dollars) Rankin 2003
Rankin 1999
Bank
Country of origin
Assets
Main subsidiaries ina
Banco Santander Central Hispano (BSCH) Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA)
Spain
62 894
Spain
61 O19
Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Argentina, Venezuela Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, Uruguay Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Venezuela, Uruguay, Paraguay Brazil, Chile; Argentina, Colombia, Paraguay Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Mexico, Panama, Peru Brazil, Argentina, Panama, Chile Mexico, Chile, Panamá, El Salvador, Dominican Republic Peru, Argentina, Panama, Colombia Brazil, Mexico, Chile Brazil, Argentina, Colombia
1
1
2
3
3
2
Citi bank
United States
59 463
4
5
ABN Amro Bank
Netherlands
16 174
5
4
FleetBoston Financial Corp.
United States
13 754
6 7
6 10
HSBC Holdings Scotiabank
United Kingdom Canada
12 203 11 455
8
11
Sudameris
France
9 10
b
J.P. Morgan Chase Lloyds TSB Group Total
United States United Kingdom
7
5 337
4 476 3 761 250 537
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of data provided by the Special Studies and Projects Department of the magazine America Economía. a Figures include subsidiaries with assets in excess of US$ 250 million. The countries are ordered according to the assets of their respective subsidiaries. In 1999, JPMorgan and Chase Manhattan had not yet merged, so it is impossible to compare the position of the joint enterprise in 2003 with the ranking of the two banks when independent. In 1999, JPMorgan was ranked 21st, while Chase Manhattan was in ninth place.
The composition of the 10 largest foreign banks present in Latin America reflects the regional importance of the Spanish banks. By the end of the first half of 2003, the two leading Spanish operators accounted for 49% of the total assets of the top ten (see table 1.7). In comparison, the three United States banks accounted for 31%. Citibank has become the most important of the three, following its 2001 purchase of Banamex in Mexico. With total assets in the region of US$60 billion, of which its Mexican subsidiary accounts for two thirds, Citibank is now third among the 10 largest foreign banks. These figures confirm the importance of the United States and Spain in FDI inflows to Latin America, in this case targeting the banking sector, following a service marketseeking strategy. Other countries with a regional banking presence include the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Canada and France, although their shares are all well below 10%. In the banking sector generally, 35 of the region’s 100 largest banks were foreign at the end of the first half
of 2003, accounting for 34% of total assets. There are also 48 local private banks which jointly account for 40% of assets, while the 17 State-owned banks hold 26%. To summarize, foreign investment inflows to Latin America explain the vigorous process of asset transnationalization experienced by the reg.ion’s economies. This is revealed through the changing structure of the largest firms operating in Latin America, with TNC presence growing at the expense of State and local participation. The change was particularly forceful in the public utility and financial services areas, where the State had traditionally played a leading role, but which it steadily gave up in the wake of the reforms implemented in the 1990s. Services joined manufacturing, where the transnational presence is longer established, as the main targets of TNC activity. Exports by TNCs have also expanded vigorously, especially in manufacturing, favoured by preferential conditions for entry into the North American markets. The largest TNCs come predominantly from the United States (largely
46
ECLAC
manufacturing) and Spain. It is important to highlight the tremendous growth achieved by Spanish firms, which at the present time are key players in the telecom and energy areas, and also in banking -in a process that has generated very substantial improvements in the quality and coverage of basic utilities previously delivered by the State. The position achieved by TNCs has been undermined somewhat by the economic crisis. The space vacated by firms that decided to close down their operations in the region, given bad results and economic uncertainty, has
gradually been occupied by various local actors, which saw the crisis as an opportunity to gain new positions, particularly in the services markets. The next section makes a more detailed analysis of the strategies that guided the behaviour of TNCs over the last year, making it possible to conceptualize and better understand recent changes in the trends prevailing in the transnational segment of individual economies.
D. STRATEGIES OF TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS This section of the ECLAC foreign investment report traditionally analyses the three major types of strategy under which transnational enterprises operate in Latin America and the Caribbean. In this edition, however, chapters I1 and I11 are devoted to the corporate strategy of efficiencyseeking, through detailed case studies of a number of Caribbean Basin countries and the automotive industry,
respectively. This section will therefore address the other two strategies in greater detail, namely the search for natural resources and the search for services markets, thereby offering a more balanced overview of the three strategies followed by TNCs operating in the region.
1. Transnational corporations in search of natural resources
Transnational enterprises continue to show interest in investing in the region’s raw materials sector, despite the crises that have affected several Latin American countries, which discouraged new investments in other productive sectors and, in some cases, called into question the key role of TNCs in the extraction of natural resources, mainly hydrocarbons and minerals. As has been traditional in the region, FDI in the primary sector is basically concentrated in the South American countries, since they offer abundant natural resources and favourable regulatory frameworks. Such conditions have largely defined the primary-exporting characteristics of the productive structure of several countries in the subregion. With the expectation that FDI in this sector would be positive for the host countries in terms of foreign-currency generation, high local content and job creation in non-urban zones, Governments implemented policies to attract foreign firms, and the latter established themselves in the subregion through partnerships with large State-owned enterprises, or through the concession of areas for natural resource exploitation, especially in hydrocarbons.
In 2003, various investments were made in the mining, oil and natural gas subsectors. The crises in several of the region’s countries had little effect on TNC investment decisions in those subsectors since this type of FDI is largely disconnected from local economic activity. Nonetheless, these firms have been confronted by a crisis of another type in which their role in the host country has been called into question, firstly because they do not provide sufficient resources to the State, and secondly because their operations cause substantial environmental harm. In the mining industry major investments are currently being carried out in Argentina, Peru and Chile -countries that have high-quality reserves and offer attractive tax breaks to the subsector. During the current decade, a large part of mining FDI has been aimed at the exploitation of gold deposits, although other minerals and metals, such as copper, have not lost importance. In addition to institutional factors offering long-term stability, the development of mining projects has been driven by an increase in
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
47
the demand for metals which, in turn, partly explains the high international prices attained by these commodities. The gold price has been rising since the second half of the 1990s, and in late 2003 it topped US$400 per ounce. In addition, thanks to the increased demand for copper, especially in China, and the control over world reserves established in Chile by the State-owned CODELCO, the price of copper rose strongly to reach US$ 1.40 per pound in March 2004, having been very depressed in recent years. In Argentina and Peru there has been significant activity by the Canadian enterprise Barrick Gold (the world's second-largest gold producer), whose development plan for 2003-2008 includes investments totalling US$ 2 billion in three deposits: Alto Chicama in Peru, Veladero in Argentina and Pascua-Lama on the border between Argentina and Chile. The latter contains proven and probable reserves of 26 million ounces of gold, making it one of the largest in the world. A key factor for exploitation of the Pascua-Lama mine was the late-2002 signing of a mining treaty between Argentina and Chile, through which a legal framework was created to regulate the activity when this spreads across both sides of the border. In addition, the Canadian operator Meridian Gold is developing another project for exploitation of a gold deposit with reserves of 3 million ounces.1oCopper mining, meanwhile, is led by Chile, where Minera Escondida, owned by BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, inaugurated phase 4 of its expansion project, requiring an investment of around US$ 1.045 billion. This raises the productive capacity of Escondida by 50%, to 1.2 million tons of copper per year (Portal Minero, 2003). Plans to expand Escondida are moving ahead, and in June 2003, a US$ 400 million investment was announced in the Escondida Norte project, which is set to come onstream in 2005. This will make it possible to maximize the synergies of the different operations, in order to achieve the firm's goal of maintaining its production around 1.2 million tons per year. In the hydrocarbons subsector, the various political upheavals -unlike the economic crises- that affected resource-rich Venezuela and Bolivia undermined TNC investment plans in this area. The same situation occurred in Brazil, where investments have slowed down in the wake of the decision by the Government to review its policy of opening up hydrocarbons activity to private enterprise. The situation in Argentina and Peru has been
different, however, with major investment plans being announced in the subsector. Nonetheless, investment in natural gas in Argentina, which is mainly used in the domestic market, has been undermined firstly by a price freeze -not only for natural gas but also for electricity, which uses gas as a fuel in thermoelectric power plantsand secondly by of a lack of clear regulations regarding public utilities. Oil activity in Venezuela was brought to a virtual standstill by the strike that occurred in the country between December 2002 and January 2003. Production slumped to just 200,000 barrels per day -a negligible volume compared to the daily rate of almost 3 million barrels before the strike. Against this backdrop, the investment of over US$ 600 million in the two development phases of theYucal Placer gasfield, operated by the Franco-Belgian TotalFinaElf," originally scheduled for the first half of 2003, had to be postponed to early 2004. The State-owned PDVSA is also looking for partners to carry out a natural gas project on the Deltana platform, located on the maritime border with Trinidad and Tobago, involving an investment of nearly US$ 6 billion. In late 2002, Statoil (Norway) and ChevronTexaco (United States) were chosen as partners for PDVSA in areas 2 and 4, but it is not yet clear who will carry out the exploration work in areas 1 , 3 and 5. In addition there is the Mariscal Sucre project, whose main activity will be a gas liquefaction plant for export to the United States. With an investment of US$ 2.7 billion, this project involves PDVSA in partnership with the Anglo-Dutch firm Royal DutcWShell and the Japanese Mitsubishi (ECLAC, 2003b, chapter 11). In Argentina, the Spanish enterprise Repsol-YPF is planning to invest US$ 5.5 billion between 2003 and 2007, while the Brazilian State-owned Petrobras, which expanded its presence in Argentina by purchasing Pérez Companc in 2002, has a US$2 billion investment planned for the same period, aimed at increasing its oil production in the country by 66%. In the case of natural gas, the Cruz del Sur Consortium completed construction of a gas pipeline through which 4.5% of Argentine gas production will be exported to Uruguay (Oil & Gas Journal, 2003). Nonetheless, as mentioned above, investment in the subsector is currently at a halt, pending definitions regarding contracts with privatized firms, since a large part of the gas is consumed in the local market.
'O 'I
There is also interest in exploiting deposits in the Argentine Patagonian area, where AngloGold of South Africa is already working the Cerro Vanguardia mine. TotalFinaElf is the lead operator with a 69.5% stake. Other participants include Repsol-YPF (15%), and the Venezuelan firms Inepetrol (10.2%) and Otepi (5.3%).
48
ECLAC
In Ecuador the heavy crude oil pipeline, construction of which by several transnational oil companies12began in June 2001, has now come on stream. This will facilitate a major increase in the country’s crude oil exports, by adding transport capacity for 400,000 barrels per day (ECLAC, 2003b, chapter 11). In Peru, investment has tended to be concentrated in the Camisea natural gas field, a project currently over 85% complete, and which has committed investments of about US$ 1.2 billion. One of the consortium partners, Hunt Oil of the United States,13signed an agreement with Tractebel (Belgium) to sell it 2.7 million tons of liquefied natural gas to generate electric power in Mexico. This export project, which involves investments totalling US$ 1.8 billion, will turn Peru into a net exporter of petroleum products. In addition to this agreement, the Camisea project received loans for US$ 135 million and US$ 75 million from the Interamerican Development Bank (IDB) and the Andean Development Corporation (ADC), respectively, to finance the processing and distribution (downstream) phases of the project. The granting of these credits aroused opposition from environmentalist and indigenous groups opposed to the Camisea project; and these groups succeeded in forcing the United States Export-Import Bank (Eximbank) to reject disbursement of a US$ 214 million credit for Camisea. The opposition that this project has met with is not an isolated phenomenon in the activity of naturalresource-seeking TNCs in Latin America. The previous edition of this report mentioned that FDI aimed at natural resource exploitation was the category least affected by the economic crisis in South America. This was because extractive activity carried out by TNCs is mainly aimed at export, is highly capital intensive, mainly uses imported inputs and generates little value-added, with the result that it is poorly integrated into local productive structures
l2
l3
(except in the case of natural gas), and gives rise to very few productive linkages. As a result, local economic conditions have little effect on investment decisions. Although these characteristics enable the activity to remain relatively immune to economic crises, they also raise serious doubts as to the real contribution made by this type of FDI in the host countries. Opposition to TNC activity has been two-pronged. Firstly attention is drawn to the environmental harm that extractive operations usually cause to the surrounding area, the aftermath of which is hard to mitigate in the short or medium term, compounded by its effects on neighbouring populations. The lawsuit against Texaco which is ongoing in Ecuador, and the forced postponement of the Alumysa project in southern Chile as result of protests by the local community, are two examples that highlight the real or potential consequences of extractive activity in the absence of appropriate environmental regulations (see box 1.5). The second prong questions the contribution made by TNCs to fiscal revenues in the host country, through tax payments and royalties. It has been suggested that firms should have to pay for the right to extract nonrenewable natural resources, bearing in mind that the countries of the region generally have abundant resources and good physical conditions for their extraction, which lowers the firm’s costs. From different domains and with different consequences, the payments made by firms for natural resource extraction have been called into question in both Bolivia and Chile. One of the main causes of the serious crisis in Bolivia was the requirement that natural gas should not leave the country without firstly making sure it would generate major gains for the nation. Similarly, in Chile the possibility of reviewing the taxation of copper mining is emerging as an issue once again, and the idea of charging a royalty for this activity has been suggested (see box 1.6).
Members of the consortium are mostly firms that currently produce oil in the Ecuadorian Amazon: Alberta Energy Ltd. (Canada, 3 1.4%), Repsol-YPF (Spain, 25.69%), Petrobras (Brazil, 15%), Occidental Petroleum (United States, 12.26%), Agip (Italy, 7.5 l%), Kerr-McGee Corp. (United States, 4.02%) and Techint (Argentina, 4.12%). Hunt Oil has a 40% stake in Camisea. The other partners are the Argentine Pluspetrol (40%) and SK Corporation (Korea) with 20%.
Foreign investment in Latin America and tha Caribbean, 2D03
49
northeast of Ecuad ars demanding the Texaw aconomic
ve wtrvitres and
have been facrng growing from lhe inhdbitants uf the which they operale, as a re
ages of the region; msdfca r rnhabitants of ths sane wh ed
of envtmnmental poilutio
countries- which fr
mrrcryohte, fluoride s) from Jamaica, Brazil or the purpose o!
cnrnrrlunitiss hava fnrm accnunt for the damage the case of Texaco, and f,
"case of tho centu
considerable ~mnomlr:
been filed in 1993behre t k
orcover, it denies ty for decisivriv take
50
ECLAC
main in ttle countrv Of ;his, 3% (US$ 13.5million) woufd' direcliy benefit the Aysin region through wages paid to taca1 wohcrs. According to the project's opponcnts.
RA prolecl would mean selling the countrv's envtronrnenl and water 10 a foreign Firm an iha cheap: and haviny developed comparative advantages as an exporter o! nahiral msources, the country would m o w inlo xelling its
industrial rubbish bin. The firm, Yhieh is seeking trnancial partners, dccidcd t 0 halt the prolecl in August 2003, in order to exert pressure in response t~ the delay in auttturiration.
,
- +
--, -
glant preparas invasion of Patagoma", Native Forest Metwork, 2002; Global ReportEr, "Texaco Em, el precio del oro negro", 2003 (http:~:www.global-reporter.netrspanrsh/i~~e~. htrnl); Arnaldo Perez. "LSe retira Alumysa?", La insignia, Madrid, 2003;Glenn Smtkeu, "Fulketi Ecuador mot Texam", Tjdskrjften Kommentar; 1QQ4; FtrndacionTerrarn Megaproject "Alumysa: de reserva de vida a basurero industrial", Andisis de polilicas priblicas. serie APP, 2002; Judith Kirnerling, "Impacto ambiental y acciones le@es*, 2002 (http:/:~ww.aocioncc~logica.orgj;Amaron W>tch, 'Timeline. The case ag ahst Chevron Texaco:'. (http:ll ~~rV.ama~onwatch.orglam azonI;C;toxioo~nde~.php?paga_nurnber15).
ElGN DIRECT INV
llows private firms to exploit. transport and market the
on oblained, subject only to
negligrble share ol the overall
busitiess. According to Ccntro de
They also insist on the need to add greater value to the gas through industrial processing within Dotivia. In
ar not !o export the gas, and whether the Hydmarbnns Act should be amended. In response, Repsol-YPF,
Treasury would receive words &out USS 0.13 projeci's opponents ins hydrocarbons shortfall cnwrsd, which raises the parado that, despite having the s e d
locared in high-quatitydeposits cl
after Venezuela, Bolivia has the lowest
lo 5e kept low. In addition FDI in the
per capita inpe continent, and its
favourable tnstihtronal framework, and in tl contexl of econowic and political
the Bolivran Governmenrs choLc
for the Pacific coastal purl ltiro
se of
rojcction, regardless of ~ R A port chosen. and now are #ven calling into question the 1996 Hydrocarbons Act
tch is aka more clangeraus), or ply use firewood or other fuels
mining in Chile is subject to the
general tax reqtme, except lhat
.
51
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Carrbbean, 2003
a f
fransimtim their costs
Under the legal Status of “Corkact mining company”, these firms liilve to pay income tax (first category) lax on dividend payments al 35 Nonef~eless,the lavJ corrtains
ttrLe-owned COOELCO. The tax regime lor Inining became a rnapr tssue in 2002, following the sale of the Disputada de Las Condes mine by Exxon Mubt! for US5 1.3 billion.
Toyalties for thd extraction and use of the mineral creates pmrtive discrmtnation, s i n w mining Es the only aciivfv that nhtalns its raw matsrials free of charqE. Generatty spaakrng, firms intsrpret :ax amendment hills as
evade payment, for exdmp e by making rernrltances abroad with paying dividsnd tax, provided tt
eration of Iry, the firm had always IDSSBB.thereby avoiding 07 inc@metax a way of improving tax system, debate has bequn on the possibility nf r ~ r y i r i n ga royalty payment frcm private tirrnr; engagin
a change ~n the rules of the game, and threaten to sraIR
m~
Iheir cvntributions io subsidiaries as intra-enterprise loans. in vrder tu
.
... .. .
~
. ..
gas: desarrolfn econrjrnicn w r s m fntRmSRS de las tralsnacionalss“. Informa de coyuntura, N’ 1,20113;Miguel Lora ‘Es cuesltdn d e tiernm, Chila depenrlsra del gas bollvlano”, 2003 (http:li WWIV pulsabolivia.com).
T h c x disputcs highlighi the need to consic-r the way t h e region’s counries have acted to attract foreign investment. The main problem that needs to bc scstilvcd is how to streiighen thc links hctwcen TNCs and the criuntrics that accommodate them, In order to break the encIave status that the fiirns adopt. In addihrin: fiiscal
pulicich (rcgulatury and tax laws mainly) need to be consistent with the objectives of reducing adverse inipac ts find inercasing positive ones. The first of these includes avoiding major harm to the envimntnenl, OF to thc lcrms of trade -given the negativz effect on internatma1pncesi n addition to improving integration with local economic activily. Thc second includes the search for better exploitation ~f technologies brought into thz cclunlry hy the investing rims. anti incseawd use of I x a l resources,
which inems iiiput suppIizrs ati- tcchnical and professiunal stafl; along with other local services. rn conclusion, transnatmnal enterprises reninin Interested in pursuing their activities in Laiiri Amcrim. despite the ract that ueverd projects have run into problems that have led to their suspension. Unlike what will be seenin the folluwing xcchrrn, thcscohstacles have. not resulted in a significant decline in natural resourcebased projects, since they dci not stcrn from ecenomic crises being faced in the host countnes, h~ instead i n w l ve institutional disputes. These new conditions have forced countries to rethink the way they set entry cnnrlihnh frjr foreign investors. I n thc primary sector, although the State presence has traditionally been very i m p m u i t , private enterprises have muiaged 10 cr;tabliA their businesses.
52
ECLAC
either independently or else through partnerships with State-owned firms. Public policies towards natural resources need to consider the sustainable development of the sector and include ways of overcoming the problems that have arisen from TNC activities in this area. Thus, it is necessary to ensure the revenues to be received by the State in return for exploitation of nonrenewable natural resources. In addition, policies are
needed to integrate foreign business activity with the local economy, in order to strengthen productive linkages and generate greater value-added in production. In this way, countries with natural resource abundance could expand their productive structure, by moving from simple extraction and export, to a stage in which there are also initial (upstream) processes and secondary (downstream) processing of the resaurce in question.
2. Transnational firms in search of local markets for services
The search for services markets has been the most important strategy pursued in Latin America in the second half of the 1990s. Implemented by TNCs, the strategy has been applied in a wide range of activities, such as energy, telecommunications, banlung and retail trade. The largest investments have been concentrated in the member countries of MERCOSUR and Chile, although Mexico and a number of Central American and Caribbean countries have also attracted investors to the financial and retail trade sectors, and to a lesser extent public utilities (ECLAC, 2000, 2001 and 2002b). Thus, South American countries received major FDI inflows channelled to the tertiary sector, which, although traditionally controlled by State-owned firms, resulted in a growing presence of foreign enterprises. From the second half of the 1990s onward, TNCs became increasingly important players among the region’s major service providers, as discussed above. Although characterized more by the transfer of existing assets than by new investments, the dynamic private investment process seen in the initial years of the reforms gave the sector an injection of resources for modernization of facilities, which led to significant improvements in both coverage and service quality, thereby increasing the systemic competitiveness of the economies in question. As mentioned in the previous edition of the foreign investment report, foreign firms that made investments in order to enter local markets are those that suffered most, both from the impact of the crises suffered by several South American countries since the start of this decade, and as a result of the slide on world stock markets that began in late 2000. In the countries of this subregion, the contraction of domestic demand in the wake of adjustment policies and devaluations seriously impaired the revenues of public-utility firms in dollar terms. This
situation highlights a significant difference with respect to enterprises seeking natural resources and efficiency for their exports, which could better protect themselves from such upheavals by sending most of their production to the external market. The consequences of the crises meant that firms in the services sector had serious difficulties in meeting their high foreign-currency liabilities contracted during the expansion phase in the 1990s. This situation, compounded by a poorly defined regulatory framework, generated conflicts between the regulatory authorities and firms, which tried to raise their charges at a time when consumer incomes were shrinking. At the world level, the crisis that shook large corporations mainly in the public utilities sector, between 2000 and 2002, revealed the fragility of enterprises which, in the midst of merger and acquisition fever, had expanded their businesses in the 1990s on the back of heavy borrowing. Unlike what happened in the last decade, they are now finding it much harder to obtain the funding needed for their activities, which makes them reluctant to contribute to their subsidiaries when these encounter problems. As a consequence, many of the subsidiaries not only have failed to meet their investment commitments, but have actually declared a suspension of payments on their liabilities. In addition, as result of the problems that have arisen, several firms have decided to withdraw from the region, the counterpart of which has meant progress for locally owned firms in the services sector (see box 1.4). The crisis raised new challenges relating to the regulatory frameworks under which the firms operate. Often, such regulations were established after the privately owned firms have been set up, so the regulatory framework design was adapted to the pre-existing industry structure, which was generally monopolistic or
Foralgn Investmsnt in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
53
otherwise unconipetitive.14 111 addihn. thc rcgulatory fi-amwork was frequerilly dcfincd under pressure both from the fiscal area and from multilateral agencies that were urging countries to specd up thc Teform process. A s a result, the regulatory framework could not prevent concentration 01 nioiiopoly crrnrluct Icatling to higher chargcs and worker layoffs; nor did it provide the tools needed to solve the regulatory disputo5 that qiiickly began tr, appcar. Tn this new context, the definition of new rules was not problem-free, as competent regulatciry hrdies in
many cases werr. not avatlnble for this task. The examples of Argentina and Brazil clearIy illustrale how Lhc authurities havc had to rethink their relationship with privatized firms. which has meant questioning previous agreements, rctlcfining rate structures in the case of Argentina, and using public funds to bail out the subsidiaries or largc TNCs in financial difficulties, as has happened in the electric-power subsector in Brazil (see boxes 1.7 nnd 1.8).
.. NEGOTIATION OF UTILITY
devaluation of Lhe Iccat currency, the Public kmeryency and ExchangeRat@Rcgitne Reform Act was passed in January 2C02, which froze public utility rates and expressed them in pesos, and apprjinlsd [tie hlinistry Dt Economic AlIairs lu rerieE;ohale concc%ion contracts with privntized firms. Rerce swcial an;d pulrticat resistance has succeeded in keeping utrtity rales frozen, despits tremendous pmssure exerted t”, the trms themselves and by !hp I M i for l?cm tu be raised In 2002 thF: Governmen: tried to adlusi sha-ges on three occasmns, hiit these
N ARGENTINA
he contracts will be individually iewed to determine whe3er thcrc has heen non-corrpliarcc by thc firms. Tnen, the firm. hF!Governm fhs co:raspnndinrJ regulatory body and various NGOs will rencgadatc
new contract, which wijl Fnally he sen: tn Cancress for approval and rmplernentattnn (Latzn A nerica Ensrqy Report Pon>). The most conflrtivc situation has arisen in the elcctricity subsectpr, Wcrc power cutages llave occur-ed. Mutual recrirniridtiuns between the Gmcrnmcnl and %he f;rms. concerning t’le causes of the power cuts;, h i m generaled a c m a l e of
their creditors. They also ~wmplainabmrt the delay 10renegotiating confsacts and establishin3 clear :egufatory rules. They warn {fiat wrth the current charges and uncertainty getierated by tbe lack of definition in :he rules, :hey can nether undertake new I I ~ \ ~ ~ ~ I I rwr W ~ carry I ~ S out lhGse needed Lo mkintain the system. Thc author,ties’ resporise is :hat the firms canna exempt ttremselves Porn the crisis n the cuurrtry, nor ignore t h ~ inability of the consurnsr to pay higher rates. They add that i: is the firms, ratl:cr thai cnnwrnem that must assume responsibil ty fnr having borrcwcd in dollars, just 3s they trust bear the inheren! rtsks of business activity There
July 2003,the new Goveriment crcatcd the Mtnistry 31 Feceral
commission waq given the task
of amounting t 3 about togcthct with a lurth
renegotiation period w
ECLAC
54
SNATFONAL ELECTRIC POWER
was this goal n ~fulfilled, t but
gxmer industry was
to 3 d W thc chronic prwblern al inveslqent financing t h ~arose t IR the 1980s. as a
re?sultof the external deb crisis. Not
Develvprnertt (BNOES), had to provide a financtal b a h t for the subsidiarips of large corporakm from developed
abrupt reduction of investment in the sector (ERA flgtim below). IT:addition, and to avoid systemic collapse, the State of Qrazil, m i n q %rough %le
TREND OF INVESTMENT IN THE EAAZILrAN ELECTRIC PQWER tNDUSTRY, 1970-1999 (Billrons of doi/ars]
I ’
ffa tlnivcrsidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, 2001,
quoted in Huso Altomonte, Políticas p susfentable doc71 secln: enerc$l/ca. Fitth biter-Parliamentary Conference on Mining and Energv (Santiago, Chile, 18-20
Juty 2001 1 The underlying muses of this situation are ragtilatory failings and the destgn of rha reforms, compniinrlad by bad financial
of defrnltion in the new model
~
Corp
of the United Stafas. which had
companies and their subsidlane The problem sterns from lhe
incentives in ter
rkeeb and kncrvl rnple, pncev far the power p1
et bubble burst
pay rts debt. Raqed n ccmcnt, Novacorn VI CVJ en?erprisejointty
degree of exchange-rate risk, by
AES Carp. will be c a p i t a l ~ ~!ndthe new firm, w h i ! ~USS 515 milllon wltl be paid back mer ;I1O to 12-year
concerning fhc risk involved [n this situation.
retains curitfor of the firm, its most immrtant asset tn the country, whil
reached an agreement with AES
RNDES offered a baitout package
what would happen thereafter. The previcus system was refxrned to provide centrally guaranteed fuels (coal and residual oil or %IED coinbustfuel”).in order to partly cumpensale for variations in rainfall, Nonetheless, the atternatwe system not been approved by late 2003.Lack
55
Foreign investmenT in Latln America and the Caribbean, 2003
nt term d at leasf three
ort-term debt In addition, the 5rm Mercada' -a new ricter rules- lo
the l i r d lnfitaliment not until at leasi 12 months
. . .
Economic Cornrnission f America and the Caribbsan (ECLAC), on the basis of Latin Amenca Ensrgy Repor:, j t and 25 September 2003; Herrnes de Araujo, Invmi'menl in fhc? B f a r k n Esl. What went w m y ? Whal should be dune?, lnsiilulo de Ecunomia da Univsrsidads F e d ~ mdo l RIO de Janeiro, 2001; Hugo Aftomonte, Poli[,caspth9icas
3. Investments and asset purchases in the services sector
In the telecoms area, wherc rcvcnucs tkcl ined sharply in 2002 filllowing a lengthy growth period, n nuniber of foreign firms, mostly froin the Uiiited Stales. art: withdrawing from the region. w h i l c t w o others, Telefdnica de Espaiii~arid Chc Mexican operator America hl6vi1, arc advancing vigorously (ECLAC, 2001, chapter TV).These two firms are competing fat control of the mobile telephony niarketiri h t i n Amcrica, taking advantage of sliarply liiwcr asset prices {see table 1.8). lntcrcht in expanding market share is being driven by upbeat projections made by analysts Tor this srihsector For exarnplc, Pyramid Research, a United States consultant in the telecoms aren, i s projccting 6% annual average rcvcnuc growth in this industry far 2003-2008, twice that estimated for Europe and thc United States, although lcss than in the emerging countries of Eastern Europe and Asia. These healthy prorospcts, together with a significani drup in the valuation of corporate assets as a result of the crisis i n the region orid lhc difficulties that inany firms are encountering in divesting assets, have offered attractive business opportunities far
buyers. For example, io the telecorn bocirn ycars, investon paid over LIS$ 2,000 per subscriber to buy mobile relephony firms, whereas in mid-2003 this value in some cases dropped as low as US$ 4M-US$ 500 {EIU, 2 0030). 111 h c 2002-2003 biennium, América Móvil and 'lelefhnica de Espaiia accelerated their asset purchases in the region essentially in Brazil, where thc vtTuggle for regional leadership is hcing waged most imnsively, bul alsti in Argentina, in the case o f Amirica M6vil (see box 1.4 and table 1.6). alid i n the rnrhile segment in Mcxico, in the case of TeIef6nm. Another of the major players is Telecotn Italia, operating through its TIM whyidiary. Consequently, the market is in the hands of ius! a few firois, arid thc f o i r largest mobile telcphony operators in Latin America coilti 01 82% of all subscnhzrs. América M 6 d , Tclcfhica and TI41 now account for 737L of mobile phone custoiiim, compared to 64.4% in 200 1. In Eurnpe and Asia, by corrrparistm, the foiir largest firms control less than half of the market (EIU, 2003b).
56
ECLAC
Table 1.8 TELEFóNICA DE ESPAÑA AND AMÉRICA MóVIL: NUMBER OF MOBILE TELEPHONE CUSTOMERS, 2003
Argentina Brazil Chile Colombia Ecuador El Salvador Guatemala Nicaragua Mexico Panama Peru Puerto Rico Uruguay Venezuela Total
Telefónicaa
América Móvil
3311 20 656 3 571 1915 816 248 409 229 3 454 420 2 149 175 146 3 307 40 806
1411 9 521 3 674 1 537 216 870 1O0 23 444
... ...
... ... 40 773
Source: N Mercurio, 7 March 2004. Includes subscribers to BellSouth, after Telefónica had acquired its Latin American assets in March 2004.
a
Latin America remains the key pillar of growth for Telefónica de España, and, despite suffering the effects of economic instability over the last few years, the firm has deepened its involvement in the region during this period, as shown by the fact that the vast majority of its subscribers are in Latin America. In Mexico, Telefónica has increased its presence through two operations: in 2001, purchase of the four local operators owned by Motorola, and in 2002, the acquisition of Pegaso PCS, which made it the second largest mobile telephony operator in Mexico. In Brazil, in 2002 it acquired 14.7% of Telesp Celular ParticipaG6e.s (TCP), a subsidiary of Portugal Telecom, in the framework of an agreement with the latter to merge under BrasilCel all the mobile phone companies owned by the two enterprises in Brazil. In 2003, BrasilCel announced the acquisition of Tele Centro Oeste Celular ParticipaGGes (TCO), whose 3 million subscribers raised the firm’s total number of customers to 17 million. Currently it is implementing a project worth roughly US$ 1.5 billion to construct a national GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) and GPRS
(General Packet Radio Service) network in Brazil. In March 2004 it reached an agreement with BellSouth (United States) to purchase its Latin American interests for US$5.85 billion. With this latest operation, Telefónica de España has consolidated its position as the region’s leading telecoms enterprise, equalling the number of subscribers to América Móvil in the mobile phone segment (see table 1.8). Another foreign telecoms firm that has consolidated its presence in the region is Telecom Italia. Already the owner of 50% of Nortel, which in turn held a controlling 54.7% stake in Telecom Argentina, the Italian operator paid US$ 60 million for an option to purchase a further 48%, which would give it total control of the consortium. Its former partner in Nortel, France Telecom, with which it had an equal share of the equity, sold 48% to a local group belonging to the Werthein fa1ni1y.l~The buyer paid US$ 125 million in cash and absorbed a prorata share of Telecom Argentina’s defaulted debt, which, at US$ 3.3 billion, was the largest amount ever accumulated by a local private group. l 6 The share purchase option would
France Telecom retains 2% of Nortel for regulatory reasons, since the rules of privatization stipulated that the majority owner of the Nortel controller group must be foreign. Telecom Italia owns the other half of Nortel. l6
This figure is reduced to US$ 2.7 billion when money held in cash to meet liabilities when necessary is deducted. Nonetheless, the debt is now in the process of renegotiation and when this concludes the real amount will likely be considerably lower, bearing in mind that similar renegotiations in the telecoms subsector resulted in haircuts of over 60% (Clarín, 2003~).
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
allow Telecom Italia to take full control of the Argentine company at any time between early 2009 and late 2013, and enable Werthein today to become the owner of half of the country’s second-largest phone company, with a real outlay of between US$ 60 and US$ 70 million (Clarín, 2003~). In contrast to the firms described above, others are scaling back their presence in the region: Verizon (United States) and Vodafone (United Kmgdom) sold their stakes in Iusacell in Mexico; Verizon also sold its Argentine subsidiary, CTI Móvil, to América Móvil; AT&T sold its Latin American assets to the Mexican operator Telmex; MCI, formerly WorldCom, has put its stakes in Avante1 and Embratel in Mexico and Brazil, respectively, up for sale; BellSouth sold BSE and BCP to América Móvil in Brazil, and then the remainder of its Latin American interests to Telefónica de España. Lastly, Sprint is loolung for a buyer for its stake in Intelig, partly owned by France Telecom, which is also currently withdrawing from the reg ion. In the electric power subsector, the problems that have faced public-utility firms in general, as described at the start of this section, were compounded by others relating to organization and regulation. These situations have provoked a number of disputes between the firms and regulators, which on occasions have delayed implementation of the company’s business plans. One of the largest investments is that announced by Endesa España, which is planning to invest US$ 2.853 billion over the period 2004-2008 (US$ 484 million to be used in 2004) in new power plants in Latin America, thereby increasing its installed capacity in the region by 1,056 MW (La Tercera, 2004). In Argentina, few investments are being carried out owing to the tension that exists between the Government and electric power enterprises as a result of pricing problems. The most important of those that are going ahead include two projects to export electricity to Chile. In October 2003 AES Corp. announced investments totalling US$50 million in an electric-power distribution line to interconnect the networks of its subsidiaries in the south of Argentina and Chile. Petrobras Energía is also studying an electric-power interconnection project similar to that of AES Corp., to be implemented through Transener, an enterprise owned by the Brazilian firm in
l7
57
partnership with the British National Grid. The Transener project involves an investment of US$ 135 million to build a 500 kV power line between the hydroelectric dam complex in the south of Argentina and Chile, which could be inaugurated between 2006 and 2007 (El Cronista Comercial, 2003). Since early 2002 firms in the subsector in Chile have been awaiting developments in the “Ley Corta” electric power bill, which aims to solve the causes of underinvestment in the sector, especially in. the transmission segment. The most conflictive point has been lack of agreement on who should pay electric power transmission tolls, an issue that generated major friction between the National Energy Commission (CNE), the subsector regulator, and the Ministry of Economic Affairs, resulting in the resignation of the CNE executive secretary. Some analysts believe that investments by electric power firms have been frozen u’ntil a new regulation is in place. In January 2004, the “Ley Corta” bill was finally passed, and the authorities now expect major progress inimproving and modernizing the sector, with increased investments in the transmission segment, particularly in the southern zone of the country..This new regulatory framework is expected to elicit investments in new projects totalling about US$3 billion (Estrategia, 2003). The retail trade segment has *gone through hard times over the last two years, as a result of the steep reduction in purchasing power in Latin America, which was even worse in foreign-currency terms. Nonetheless, the declining sales trend levelled out in 2003, and an increase of 2.6% is forecast in the consumption of food, beverages and tobacco for 2004 (EIU, 2 0 0 3 ~ )In . 2003, the performance in this subsector has varied across countries: retail sales retreated in Brazil and Venezuela, while Argentina and Mexico posted recoveries compared to the previous periods.I7 Faced with this situation, some chains have decided to leave the region, or to offload some of their assets. The Dutch enterprise Royal Ahold, for example, having made two acquisitions in 2002 in Argentina and Brazil, changed course and in early 2003 announced its intention to divest its assets in the region. In that year it sold its interests in Chile, Paraguay and Peru, and in March 2004 reached an agreement to sell most of its Brazilian assets to Wal-Mart. Meanwhile, JC Penney sold six of
In Brazil and Venezuela, retail trade sales fell by 2% and 16%, respectively, between January and August 2003, compared to the same period a year earlier. In Mexico, supermarket sales grew by 5.6% during the first half of 2003, while economic recovery has had a positive effect on retail trade in Argentina (EIU, 2003~).
ECLAC
its stores in Mexico to the Sanborns group, which forms part of the Mexican conglomerate Grupo Carso.18 Among the chains that remain, the strategies observed to cope with the decline in purchasing power involve selling own-brand products, which enables the firms to offer significant discounts, in conjunction with the purchase of other chains, or partnerships with them, to increase both their scale and their bargaining power with suppliers, and the horizontal diversification of their activities. The merger and acquisitions movement is intensifying the level of concentration in the area. The Chilean groups have performed outstandingly, having consolidated in the local retail market and expanded to several other Latin American countries (see box 1.4). The financial subsector has also been affected by the crisis in South America, the repercussions of which have caused the exit of a number of foreign financial institutions, mainly from the Argentine and Brazilian markets. In the latter country, the largest in the region and where foreign banks have penetrated least, these have also faced harsh competition from large local banks, whose strengthened competitiveness prevented foreign competitors from gaining dominant market positions. Those that have entered the country in the last five years, such as HSBC, BBVA and ABN A m o , have found it hard to compete and forge an identity in the market, for which reason several of them decided to divest their Brazilian assets. In contrast, locally owned banks, particularly Bradesco and Itaú, have expanded considerably over the last two years, leading the consolidation movement that has occurred in the banking system by purchasing assets put on sale by the State, and others that were privately owned both locally and by foreigners (see box 1.4). National banks continued to progress in 2003, as a number of foreign competitors
l8
withdrew, but the novelty was that other foreign banks also made acquisitions, thereby signalling a desire to grow and consolidate in the Brazilian market. Currently, high rates of interest, combined with heavy government reliance on borrowing, are providing banks with a chance to acquire assets of lower risk and higher yield, such as government bonds. Some analysts believe that if a reduction in the public deficit is achieved and inflationary pressures are eased, in the medium-term the banks will start to look for business opportunities with the private sector, mainly in the consumer credit market. Foreign banks such as Citigroup (United States) and HSBC (United Kingdom) have already begun to focus their strategy in that direction (EIU, 2003d, 2003a). In conclusion, the services sector, which was where TNCs penetrated most in the 1990s, suffered a reverse, or a slowdown in progress, during the first few years of the current decade. The economic crisis, with attendant weakening of domestic demand, left firms in this sector in an uncomfortable position, since they cannot redirect their production towards markets where demand conditions are more favourable. On the other hand, the crisis revealed regulatory conflicts that served to further complicate the situation for these firms. As a result, several of them redefined their strategy and decided to offload their operations in the region. This enabled local enterprises to increase their presence in the sector by buying up assets put on sale, as was clearly seen in the banking subsector in Brazil and in retail trade in Chile. At the same time, other companies that decided to remain, especially European telecom operators, managed to consolidate their positions. The telecoms area in particular has displayed great dynamism over the last few years, with major operations carried out by both European and Latin American companies in the largest regional markets.
JC Penney had already withdrawn from Chile in 1999, having sold its assets to the local group that owns the Almacenes París department store chain.
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
59
E. CONCLUSIONS The analysis presented in this chapter suggests that the FDI phenomenon is generally somewhat more complex than normally assumed, and the different standpoints from which it is usually studied only provide a partial view. Accordingly, a 'combination of the various perspectives, using different statistical sources, is needed to build a conceptual framework that affords a more thorough and deeper understanding of the nature and fundamentals of both FDI and the activities of transnational corporations. ECLAC is therefore proposing a .reference framework for interpreting the phenomenon in Latin America and the Caribbean, in which TNC strategies are fundamental. This chapter points out that FDI flows have continued to decline, and this has caused additional concerns especially in terms of external financing. In Mexico, Central America. and the Caribbean, the preferential destination for firms pursuing an efficiency-seeking strategy, FDI retreated less than in South America, where natural resources- and marketseeking strategies have predominated. Despite this, the presence of TNCs in both good's- and serviceproducing activities remains strong. In additron, the review of situations facing the natural resources- and regional market-seeking strategies confirms that FDI seems to have entered a stage of smaller volumes, which in turn has generated macroeconomic instability. Moreover, the gap between expectations and reality in terms of FDI flows has widened. The research carried out suggests that this gap is different in each of the corporate strategies that determine FDI destinations and amounts (see table 1.9). When a few examples are examined, it can be seen that in designing policies FDI-recipient countries generally expect natural-resource-seeking FDI to generate exports based on natural resources with high local content, in order to generate employment in nonurban zones, along with increased fiscal revenues through taxes, among other benefits. Recent experience in the region, however, suggests that a number of problems have arisen from the fact that TNC activities adopt an enclave modality without integrating into the local economy; they generate little value-added, and the level of local processing is low; in addition, revenue from taxes levied on nonrenewable resources is very small, and this is
compounded by complications resulting from the instability of international commodity prices and environmental pollution. With regard to FDI associated with a local-marketseeking strategy (goods and services), the main expectations held by the Governments of recipient countries focus on the creation of new productive activities, improvements to the economy's systemic competitiveness, increased local content, promotion of new productive linkages, greater local business development and improvements in the coverage, cost and quality of local services, among other things. Here again, recent experience shows that this category of FDI in Latin America has been accompanied by problems of various kinds. Higher costs and lower quality among these products or services, compared to international norms, tends to limit their competitiveness; and there have also been regulatory and standards-related problems especially in countries facing macroeconomic difficulties. As a result, there is a considerable mismatch in the region between the expected benefits and those that have effectively been materialized in the case of FDI driven by natural-resource-seeking strategies, and an even larger one in the case of FDI motivated by the search for local markets. The situation with respect to the strategy that seeks efficiency to conquer external markets will be addressed in depth in chapters I1 and 111. The conclusions of this analysis ultimately suggest that it would be advisable for national policymakers to take a more broad-based view both of the FDI phenomenon and of TNC activities, even if only to ensure external resource flows. Clearly there are causal . relationships between the economic determinants, host countries' expectations, and the problems that have arisen following several years of the transnationalizationprocess in local economies -relations that can best be understood from a perspective that takes account of the strategies of TNCs operating in the region. It would therefore seem prudent to have a contingency plan in place to cope with the various types of problem that are starting to emerge in relation to FDI. Host countries should define what they expect from FDI, and the role it will play in the context of their national productive development strategy, in order to prioritize the corporate strategies seen as most important in this context.
60
ECLAC
Table 1.9 IMPACT OF BUSINESS STRATEGIES ON RECIPIENT ECONOMIES FDI strategy
Potential benefits
Possible difficulties
Natural-resourceseeking
Increased natural-resource exports Improved international competitiveness of natural resources High local content of exports Employment in non-urban areas Tax revenues and royalty income
Enclave activities not integrated into local economy Little local processing of resources Cyclical international prices Low tax revenues from non-renewable resources Environmental pollution
Local-marketseeking (national or regional)
New local economic activities Increased local content New/deepened production linkages Local enterprise development Improved services (quality, coverage and price) and improved systemic competitiveness
Production of goods and services not internationally competitive (not world class) Weak position in terms of international competitiveness Regulatory and competition problems Disputes in relation to international investment obligations Crowding out of local companies
Efficiency-seeking (to capture export markets)
Increased exports of manufactures Improved international competitiveness of manufactures Transfer/assimilation of technology Training of human resources New/deepened production linkages Local enter prise deve1op ment Evolving from an export platform into a manufacturing centre
Becoming stuck in the low-value-addedtrap Focus on static rather than dynamic advantages Truncated production linkages: dependence of assembly operations on imported components Crowding out of local companies ”Race to the bottom” in production costs (salaries, social benefits, exchange rate) “Race to the top” in incentives (tax, infrastructure) Limited cluster creation
Technological-assetseeking
Technology transfer Improved science and technology infrastructure Specialized logistics development
Low propensity to invest in technology Stagnation,of production Unfocused national policy
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
APPENDIX
61
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63
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table I-A.l LATIN AMERICA: SECTORAL DISTRIBUTION OF FDI, 1996-2003 (Millions of dollars and percentages)
1996
Mexico Primary Manufacturing Services Brazil Primary Manufacturing Services Argentina Primary Manufacturing Services Other Chile Primary Manufacturing Services Colombia Primary Manufacturing Services Ecuador Primary Manufacturing Services
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003a
Cumulative total
Share
(YO)
116 4 719 2 887
140 7 306 4 715
71 5 123 3 048
21o 8 985 3 971
282 9 309 6 858
38 5 854 20 677
209 5 435 7 615
25 4 532 4 875
1 O90 51 262 54 646
1 48 51
111 1 740 5 814
457 2 036 12 817
143 2 767 20 362
846 7 003 20 140
1299 5 088 24 139
1 494 7 O00 12 547
637 7 620 10 499
1 482 4 480 6 940
6 469 37 734 113 258
4 24 72
1 728 2 776 2 096 350
177 3 308 4 888 788
1 324 1147 3 648 1173
17 845 1 950 3 153 1 038
2 736 1 487 4 749 1 445
898 49 1261 -42
1 225 596 -1 036 -9
... ... ... ...
25 934 11 314 18 759 4 743
43 19 31 8
1 O90 917 2 829
1758 627 2 833
2 523 530 2 981
1 388 828 6 983
363 240 2 419
975 754 3 053
2 002 209 1166
... ... ...
10 098 4 105 22 264
28 11 61
866 731 1515
696 514 4 354
110 785 1 934
-73 505 1 o19
27 514 1 758
1 020 236 1 244
837 285 851
483 140 312
3 966 3 710 12 987
19 18 63
307 24 169
562 45 117
769 30 70
605 8 36
68 1 10 28
1139 59 132
1 078 56 141
... ...
5 141 232 693
85 4 11
...
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of Ministry of Economic Affairs of Mexico, Directorate General of Foreign Investment;Central Bank of Brazil; Ministry of Economic Affairs of Argentina; Foreign Investment Committee of Chile; Banco de la República de Colombia; and Central Bank of Ecuador. a In the cases of Mexico and Brazil, the figures for 2003 cover the whole year. In the case of Colombia, they refer to the period January-June. The global total of FDI flows broken down by destination sector differs from the total reported in the balance of payments, because the former only includes amounts notified to the National Foreign Investment Register (RNIE), in addition to imports of fixed assets by maquila enterprises. RNlE notifications tend to be made with a significant lag compared to the date on which the investments are actually made. This means that the amount of FDI reported to RNlE in any given month largely corresponds to investments carried out several months earlier. Similarly, the figure reported as FDI materialized during a given period is not definitive, because the amount subsequently increases as RNlE receives notification of the remainder of investments carried out in that period. The differences between figures obtained from the Foreign Investment Committee and the balance of payments (Central Bank) (see table 1.8) arise from the types of record used by each institution. The Committee only considers investment carried out under the auspices of D.L.600, which covers over 85% of the total investment entering the country. Moreover, while the Central Bank records investment flows received under all mechanisms, it does not classify as FDI long-term credits granted to foreign firms, which are very significant in the case of large-scale mining projects. Another source of discrepancy relates to the deadlines under which flows are registered. The Central Bank does this when the money actually enters or is withdrawn, while the Investment Committee records flows at the date on which the investment contract establishes their entry.
64
ECLAC
Table I-A.2 LATIN AMERICA: LEADING INVESTOR COUNTRIES, 1996-2003 (Millions of dollars and percentages)
Mexico United States Netherlands Spain United Kingdom Canada Other Brazil United States Spain Netherlands Cayman Islands France Other Argentina Spain United States Netherlands France Italy Other Chile United States Spain Canada United Kingdom Italy Other Bolivia United States Argentina Italy Brazil Spain Other Colombia Spain United States Netherlands Cayman Islands Virgin Islands Other Ecuador United States Canada Italy Argentina Spain Other Venezuela United States Spain France United Kingdom Argentina Other
Cumulative total
Share
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003a
5 187 493 74 83 516 1 367
7 455 359 329 1 830 240 1 948
5 340 1 070 345 184 208 1 095
7 067 1 O00 997 ‘-193 623 3 672
11 841 2 583 1 908 265 665 -813
20 362 2 563 743 87 984 1 830
8 227 1155 293 1144 208 2 233
5 101 470 1381 853 160 1 467
70 579 9 693 6 068 4 252 3 605 12 800
66 9 6 4 3 12
1 975 587 526 655 970 2 783
4 382 546 1487 3 382 1 235 4 008
4 692 5 120 3 365 1 807 1805 5 777
8 088 5 702 2 042 2 115 1982 6 843
5 399 9 593 2 228 2 035 1910 7 648
4 465 2 767 1892 1 755 1913 8 250
2 614 587 3 348 1555 1815 8 834
2 383 71O 1 444 1909 825 5 632
33 998 25 612 16 332 15 213 12 455 49 775
22 17 11 10 8 32
146 2 021 1 079 418 1o9 3 180
1 792 2 017 1757 168 284 3 140
908 920 1 073 1310 339 2 742
16 830 1307 424 1 536 655 3 233
6 750 947 378 656 91o 778
494 533 1 302 52 1 -60 -624
-900 -193 -87 -175 -1 18 2 251
...
...
26 020 7 552 5 926 4 434 2 119 14 700
43 12 10 7 3 24
2 285 488 585 298 325 856
904 1508 1 058 542 19 1187
1 402 896 988 704 6 2 039
1 395 4 580 458 370 51 2 345
778 678 1165 183 96 122
1 776 35 1 207 390 920 1137
594 248 506 1510 30 489
480 122 187 130 7 351
9 613 8 871 5 155 4 126 1 453 8 525
25 24 14 11 4 22
131 7 138 38 14 98
257 95 149 68 83 202
357 221 110 35 46 259
339 106 65 139 10 351
368 81 52 40 46 244
351 1O0 63 72 59 231
289 31 27 182 268 202
...
2 092 64 1 604 574 526 1587
34 11 10 10 9 26
360 366 51 165 115 829
84 587 33 929 357 970
1 652 87 145 56 1 69 1 657
-85 819 876 660 41 1 1414
-145 158 177 119 -64 31
869 629 184 -432 571 52 1
147 -54 32 -1o1 3 51O
... ...
2 882 2 592 1 498 1901 1 463 5 932
25 9 6 4 4 52
217 13 1 14 18 225
287 110 10 31 26 224
360 207 84 28 1 150
230 133 64 88 O 132
235 171 67 25 86 137
317 430 87 64 85 340
392 352 1o9 58 87 264
...
2 038 1416 422 308 303 1 472
34 24 7 5 5 25
567 58 67 84 136 1271
1116 1016 262 560 303 2 279
81O 305 136 171 228 2 842
975 123 174 207 213 1 598
924 487 260 21 25 2 747
1 332 113 383 55 64 1501
507 116 143 -37 -37 676
...
6 231 2 218 1 425 1 061 932 12 914
25 9 6 4 4 52
... ... ...
...
... ... ... ...
...
... ...
... ... ... ... ... ...
... ... ...
... ... ...
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of Ministry of Economic Affairs of Mexico; Central Bank of Brazil; Ministry of Economic Affairs of Argentina; Foreign Investment Committee of Chile; Central Bank of Bolivia; Banco de la República de Colombia; and Central Bank of Venezuela. a Figures for Mexico correspond to the period January-September;for Brazil they cover January-October.
65
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table I-A.3 LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN: ACQUISITION OF PRIVATE ENTERPRISES FOR AMOUNTS EXCEEDING US$ 100 MILLION, 2003 (Millions of dollars and percentages) Enterprise sold
Country
1. Primary sector Valepar S.A. Valepar S.A.
Brazil Brazil
L L
Caemi Mineraqáo e Metalurgia Valepar S.A. Valepar S.A. Minera Alumbrera Ltd. Oil fields Minera Alumbrera Ltd. Yacimiento Boquerón (60%) and DZO (100%) Vintage Oil Ecuador Klabin Bacell S.A.
Brazil Brazil Brazil Argentina Mexico Argentina Venezuela Ecuador Brazil Mexico Brazil
2. Manufacturingsector Seminis Riocell S.A. Alcoa América Latina Latasa Sonae Produtos Derivados Cia. Siderurgica Tubaráo 3. Services sector: Electricity and water Río Maipo Aguas Andinas Central Hidroeléctrica de Canutillar Central Costanera Ecoeléctrica Termopernambuco Líneas de Transmisión Telecoms oi Grupo lusacell BCP S.A. Tele Centro Oeste Celular Compañia de Teléfonos de El Salvador (CTE) BSE Sistemas Eletrdnicos Ltda. Finance Banco BBA Creditanstalt S.A. Lloyds TSB BBV Banco Brasil Banco Sudameris Brasil Grupo Financiero lnverlat Banco Fiat Grupo Nacional Provincial S.A. Orígenes AFJP
Other Sodimac S.A. Infraestructura 2000 TMM Puertos y Terminales Total
Ownership Buyer
Country
Percentage Amount paid 15 8.5
3 303 830 520
L L L F F F F F L
Mitsui & Co. Ltd. National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) Cia. Vale do Rio Doce (CVRD) Litel Participaqdes Bradespar Wheaton River Minerals Ltd. Apache Corp. Wheaton River Minerals Ltd. Perenco Encana Corp. RGM International
Brazil Brazil Brazil Canada United States Canada United Kingdom Canada Singapore
43.4 5.5 4.6 25.0 1O0 25.0 1O0 81.7
426 287 239 210 200 182 160 137 112
Brazil Brazil Brazil
L L L F L L
Fox Paine & Company LLC Aracruz Celulose Alcoa Inc. Rexam plc Sonae SGPS Arcelor
United States Brazil United States United Kingdom Portugal Luxembourg
1O0 1O0 40.9 88.6 50 8.8
2 228 650 61 1 397 324 144 102
Chile
F
Chile
98.7
10 282 203
Chile Chile Argentina Puerto Rico Brazil Chile
F F F F L F
Compañía General de Electricidad (CGE) Aguas de Barcelona Hidroeléctrica Guardia Vieja Endesa S.A. Natural gas lberdrola S.A. Hydro Quebec
Spain Chile Spain Spain Spain Canada
9.6 1O0 27.4 50 72.6 1O0
189 174 139 130 117 110
Brazil Mexico Brazil Brazil El Salvador Brazil
L F L L
Telemar Norte Leste Movil Acc.ess América Móvil BrasilCel América Móvil América Móvil
Brazil Mexico Mexico Portugal/ Spain Mexico Mexico
1O0 73.9 1O0 61.1 95
1 577 81 1 625 430 417 171
Brazil Brazil Brazil Brazil Mexico Brazil Mexico Argentina
F F F F F F F F
Banco Itaú HSBC Banco Bradesco ABN Amro Bank of Nova Scotia Bancoltaú GNP Pensiones Banco Santander Central Hispano
Brazil United Kingdom Brazil Netherlands Canada Brazil Mex¡co Spain
95.8 1O0 1O0 94.6 36 1O0 40 20
936 815 796 769 323 244 200 150
Chile Chile Mexico
L F L
S.A.C.I. Falabella Chile Obrascón Huarte y Lain (OHL) Spain SSA Mexico Inc. United States
1O0 60 51
569 273 114 15 813
F F
,
Japan Brazil
...
51
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information published in Bloomberg and in specialized magazines. = prior to the sale, the firm was under local ownership. F = prior to the sale, the firm was foreign-owned. Alcoa (United States) paid US$ 397 million to Grupo Camargo (Brazil), for a 40.9% stake in the firm’s South American operations
aL
(including a presence in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela). Tele Centro Oeste Celular (TCO) was acquired by BrasilCel through its subsidiary Telesp Celular Participapjes. BrasilCel is a joint venture formed in equal parts by Portugal Telecom (Portugal) and Telefónica (Spain), which controls a large proportion of the fixed and mobile telephone market in Brazil. Mobile telephony operates under the brand name “Vivo”, andTCO became part of this enterprise.
66
ECLAC
Table I-A.4 LATIN AMERICA: 50 LARGEST TRANSNATIONAL ENTERPRISES BY CONSOLIDATED SALES, 2002 (Millions of dollars) Position in 2002
Position in 1999
1
3
2
2
3 4
20 9
5
Firm
Country of origin
Sector
Telefónica de España S.A.
Spain
Telecommunications
34 230
General Motors Corporation
United States
Automotive
14 862
Delphi Automotive Systems Corp. United States Wal-Mart Storesb United States
Autoparts Commerce
13 267 10 676
1
Volkswagen A.G.
Germany
Automotive
1O 293
6
4
DaimlerChrysler A.G.
Germany
Automotive
9 908
7
6
Ford Motor Companyb
United States
Automotive
6 742
8 9 10 11 12 13
8
12
Repsol-YPF Samsung Corporation Nissan Motor Pepsico Sony Corporation Royal Dutch/Shell Group
OiVgas Electronics Automotive Beveragedbeer Electronics Oil/gas
5 781 5 050 4 996 4 666 4 652 4 420
14 15
14
Telecom Italia Spa. Nestleb
Spain Korea Japan United States Japan Netherlands/ United Kingdom Italy Switzerland
Telecommunications Food
4 293 4 246
16
34
4 189
28 17
Netherlands/ United Kingdom United States United States
Electronics
17 18
Koninklijke Philips Electronic N.V. Hewlett-Packard (HP)b ExxonMobil Corporationb
Computers OiVgas
4 110 4 028
19
11
United States
Computers
3 992
20
7
International Business Machines (IBM)b The Coca-Cola Companyb
United States
Beveragedbeer
3 931
21 22
19 10
General Electric Carrefour Groupb
United States France
Electronics Commerce
3 830 3 785
23 24 25 26
27
Siemens A.G. Lear Corporation Endesa ChevronTexacob
Germany United States Spain United States
Electrical appliances Autoparts Electric power OiVgas
3 776 3 551 3 450 3 153
Matsushita Electric Industrial (Panasonic) AES Corporationb
Japan
Electronics
3 065
United States
OiVgas
2 987
British American Tobacco PIC. (BAT)
United Kingdom
Tobacco
2 522
Visteon Corporation TRW, Inc. Cargill, Inch Flextronics International Ltd. MCI (ex WorldCom) Verizon Communications Procter & Gamble Fiat Autob Koninklijke Ahold N.V.b LG Electronics Inc. Kimberly-Clark Corporation Unileverb
United States United States United States United States United States United States United States Italy Netherlands Republic of Korea United Kingdom United Kingdom
Autoparts Autoparts Agribusiness Electronics Telecommunications Telecommunications Hygiene/cleaning Automotive Commerce Electronics PuIp/paper Hygiene/food
2 380 2 300 2 296 2 097 2 012 1 909 1718 1 688 1614 1609 1551 1457
26 13
5 25
27 28 29
30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41
31
24
40 22 16 29 23
Sales
Main subsidiaries
a
Brazil, Chile, Peru, Argentina, Mexico Mexico, Brazil, Colombia Mexico Mexico, Brazil, Argentina Mexico, Brazil, Argentina Mexico, Brazil, Argentina Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela Argentina Mexico Mexico Mexico, Argentina Mexico Brazil, Argentina, Chile Brazil, Argentina, Chile Mexico, Brazil, Co lomb ia, Argentina Mexico Mexico, Brazil Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Argentina Mexico, Brazil, Argentina Mexico, Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina Mexico Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Argentina Mexico, Brazil Mexico Chile Brazil, Colombia, Argentina Mexico Brazil, Venezuela, Chile, Argentina Mexico, Brazil, Venezuela, Chile, Argentina Mexico Mexico Brazil, Argentina Mexico Brazil Venezuela Mexico Brazil, Argentina Brazil, Chile, Argentina Mexico Mexico Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Brazil
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
67
(Table I-A.4 concluded)
Position in 2002
Position in 1999
42 43 44 45 46 47
36 18 43
48 49 50
Firm
Country of origin
Sector
Sales
Main subsidiaries a
37
BASF A.G. Philips Morris Companies Inc.b Eastman Kodak Company BP Amoco PIC. MIM Holdings Renault
Germany United States United States United Kingdom Austral ia France
Chemicals Tobacco Photography Petroleum Mining Automotive
1 407 1 400 1 379 1 306 1254 1123
32
E.I. Du Pont de Nemoursb
United States
Chemicals
1 088
Avon Inc. Electricité de France
United States France
Hygienelcleaning Electric power
1 070 1033
Brazil, Mexico Mexico, Argentina Mexico Argentina, Colombia Argentina Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Argentina Mexico, Brazil, Argentina Mexico, Brazil Brazil
Total
222 142
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information provided by the Special Studies and Projects Department of the magazine América Economia. a Includes subsidiaries with sales in excess of US$ 100 million. Countries are ordered according to the sales of their respective subsidiaries. For these enterprises, the countries in which they are known to operate are indicated in italics, but as they did not publish their results in 2002, América Economía could not include them in its listing. For the same reason, firms that usually appear among the largest transnationals in terms of sales volume, this year are not included. Some of the leading absentees are Motorola, BellSouth, Ericsson, Intel, Nokia, Toyota, Norte1 and 3M.
68
ECLAC
Table I-A.5 LATIN AMERICA: MAIN ACQUISITIONS IN THE RETAIL TRADE SUBSECTOR, 2000-2004
(Millions of dollars and percentages) Date
Firm
Country
Seller
Buyer
2004
BompreGo
Brazil
2004 2004
Carrefour Las Brisas
Chile Chile
Wal-Mart (United States) D&S (Chile) Cencosud (Chile)
2003
Santa Isabel
Chile
2003
Supermercados Disco
Argentina
2003
JC Penney
Mexico
2003
Santa Isabel
Peru
Royal Ahold (Netherlands) Carrefour (France). Jürgen Paulmann (Chi1e) Royal Ahold (Netherlands) Royal Ahold (Netherlands) JC Penney (United States) Royal Ahold (Netherlands)
2003 2003
Sodimac Supermercados Stock
Chile Paraguay
2002
Mexico
2002
Farmacias Benavides (Far-Ben) Disco
Argentina
2002
G Barbosa
Brazil
2001
The Home Depot
Chile
2001
Boticas Fasa
Peru
2001
The Home Depot
Argentina
2000
Drogamed
Brazil
... Royal Ahold (Netherlands) Farmacias Benavides (Far-Ben México) Velox Retail Holdings (Argentina) n.a. The Home Depot (United States) Local private investors The Home Depot (United States) n.a.
Percentage
Amount paid
1O0
300
1O0 1O0
124 30
Cencosud (Chile)
1O0
95
Cencosud (Chile)
1O0
...
Grupo Sanborns (Mexico) Grupo Interbank (Peru)/Grupo Nexus (Peru) Falabella (Chile) a Grupo A.J. Vierci (Paraguay) Farmacias Ahumada FASA (Chile) Royal Ahold (Netherlands) Royal Ahold (Netherlands) Falabella (Chile)
1O0
...
1O0
...
1O0 1O0
569 5
67
45
50
508
1O0
...
67
54
15
2
1O0
87
77
25
Farmacias Ahumada FASA (Chile) Cencosud (Chile) Farmacias Ahumada FASA (Chile)
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). a Corresponds to
a merger in which, through a capital increase equivalent to the total value of its assets (US$525 million), Sodimac became part-owner of Falabella.According to its capital contribution, its stake will be 21Yo. bAs a result of this acquisition, Royal Ahold controls 100% of Supermercados Disco. FASA entered the Peruvian market in partnership with Santa Isabel, and then through successive purchases gained control of 100% of Boticas Fasa.
69
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
11. EFFICIENCY SEEKING STRATEGIES TO CAPTURE EXPORT MARKETS:TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS IN COSTA RICA, HONDURAS, JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
A. INTRODUCTION
Transnational corporations (TNCs) have come to play a central role in manufactures exports (UNCTAD, 2002). Efficiency-seeking companies set up international systems of integrated production (ISIP) based on business strategies aimed at optimizing the configuration of their production processes by moving production to locations that offer significant advantages in terms of costs and access to export markets (Lall, Albaladejo and Zhang, 2004). The subdivision of the global value chain and the multiplication of supplier networks have opened up new opportunities for developing countries to take part in ISIP. Labour-intensive activities are moved to places where a low-cost but efficient workforce is available. The segmentation of the value chain has also generated new opportunities to export services for countries that are able to provide them competitively. In terms of advantages for host countries, efficiencyseeking TNCs have the potential to increase the recipient economies’ competitiveness, either by introducing valueadded activities in industries in which such companies
had not invested previously or by making changes in established industries to move from labour-intensive, low-productivity, low-technology activities to knowledge-based, high-productivity, high-technology activities. In order for this industrial and technological upgrading of exports to occur, firms must make production more efficient and undertake a restructuring process geared to switching from static comparative advantages to dynamic ones in the host countries. Moreover, the TNC subsidiaries established in the host countries can forge linkages with local firms. When such linkages are in place, the resulting exports will be sustainable and beneficial for the recipient economies, will have higher domestic value added and will help strengthen the country’s business sector (UNCTAD, 2001). Labour-intensive exports are economically beneficial as long as domestic value added is positive at international prices, even if it does not grow as fast as the exports themselves. Countries are inclined to steer
70
~
their excess labour supply towards export-oriented production when they have little chance of employing it in better-paid or more economically desirable activities. This suggests, in line with any theory of comparative advantages, that such countries will specialize in labourintensive processes as they begin their export drive. The challenge is to make exports sustainable through industrial and technological upgrading (Lall, Albaladejo and Zhang, 2004). To this end, local suppliers must provide innovation capacity, as well as the skills to carry out a wide range of value-added functions associated with the manufacturing process, including product and component design, sourcing and testing, inventory management, packaging and delivery logistics. These growing demands on key suppliers represent an additional market access barrier for smaller, newer suppliers in developing countries, even in low-technology industries. The successful national industrialization strategies carried out by some economies (primarily Asian ones), which combined local capacity-building with efforts to attract export-oriented TNCs, serve as a model for other countries wishing to promote export-oriented foreign direct investment (FDI) and to make it an integral part of their national development strategies from which they will ultimately benefit (Lall, 2002; Loewendahl, 2002). The spread of ISIP and the upgrading of the activities of TNC subsidiaries in specific locations along the value chain depend not only on the strategies of the firms involved, but also on the host countries’ policies. These policies can play a major role in determining the configuration of ISIP if the governments concerned have a clear understanding of how they fit in with the corporate strategies that determine the nature and location of these systems (Mortimore, Vergara and Katz, 2001). Host-country authorities thus face a twofold challenge: they must try to join the ISIP of expanding TNCs, on the one hand, and make sure that the relationship is beneficial for them, on the other (Mortimore and Vergara, 2004). Meeting this twofold challenge may be harder than it looks. Two major problems have been identified in this regard. The first is that some developing countries have
ECLAC
found that their policies to attract efficiency-seeking FDI are not sustainable over the long term, owing to factors such as increases in local wages, limitations on the industrial and technological upgrading of the assembly operations imposed by export market access mechanisms, the rollback of the benefits provided under preferential trade agreements as a result of further global trade liberalization and the fiscal and financial burdens created by the incentives used to attract FDI (Oman, 2000; Mortimore and Peres, 1997). The second problem consists of the difficulties that form what could be called the “low-value-added trap” (UNCTAD, 2002). These difficulties are associated with the attraction of lowquality FDI, typically from firms that are relatively uninterested in forming linkages with the local economy, have little potential to generate spillovers and operate with a short-term time horizon. Such firms, which invest very little in productivity and skills development, are most commonly found in labour-intensive industries, which basically compete on price (more than on quality, timely delivery or fashion) and often see workers more as a cost to be contained than as a resource to be developed. Given the slightest downturn in the host country’s competitive position (exchange-rate appreciation, wage hikes, social security cost increases, etc.), these so-called “fly-by-night” firms will quickly pull up stakes in pursuit of a better place to locate their cost centres. In practice, this suggests that there is a broad spectrum of TNCs differentiated by their behaviour. At one end are those that can be caricatured as “fly-bynight”, which often cause the host country to fall into the “low-value-added trap”. At the other end are TNCs that are industry leaders, such as Intel in semiconductors or Toyota in automobiles, which, instead of seeking temporary advantages, aim to locate parts of their ISIP in countries that will become their partners. As the case of Toyota is considered in some detail in chapter I11 of this report, the experience of Intel will be analysed in more depth here to give a clearer idea of the nature of this class of TNCs that seek efficiency through direct investment in ISIP (see box 11.1).
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Carlhhean, 2003
the wortd's leading semiconductor firm 3y deploying a global investment jtmtegy to reorient I ~ kSIP.Thts S IS ' rstlected in the fact that its awerags
?I
subsidiaries. This s
-spd-?+market and market-access ic-ainc lntml ectimatnc *a+ each n
most, a six-month lead aver its
w
untries such as Ireland, the ppine$ and Costa Rim. Intet's 151P includes two kinds of plants: (i) those OF manufacturing ir/rrhrc enrl ntrhinn mtfirrrrr#edr i r p r j l h
and testing, where the wafers are
sites must enable it to minimkc the
tars, such as tmnsport
attached lo tRin gold elements of the
main competitive technology- to CO over two thirds of
continue to expánd i n k
72
ECLAC
200 3 400 0.18 0,25
n.a.
Flash memor Lagic
i
150-200 products
Logics, computer
150.200
prwducts ogic, computer
boards San José, 1997
Lug1 Assembly and tcsting
Log¡
Assembly and testing Assembly and testing
Fla& memory
1227 LCKJc
.
150-~00 15U-200
I.
that most of the wafer plants -especially the most rnddern ones using thc most advmced techno such as O.i3-rnkron process technofogy- are Incatad In the U t a t s , where there ifi relatively 1 $k of war,terrorism or technology
Access to the European market played a malor role in that site selecticn.Today, about 3Q% of Intel's wafer manufacturing capacFty is
localed outside the United Statcs This y h w s lkat other factors have
imines the srting of assembly fasting ptants;, which carry vu ur-intertsive tasks. In 1979 in?
a Rica (1 997); artd in Shanghai, China ( l Y Y 7 ) . Iritel Ras deepened its presence at each ol these sites by building new assembly arid testing plants to complomcnt the
oriyirial ones. In other words, onc the principal charactenstics of th Intel ISID is that it tends trs graw handful af existing !mations and expansion to new ones is ?Wit@ unnnmmnn. Slting decisions are
construction rusts, jnlraslx #y, logistics, supplier capabilities pruducticn costs. Thus, there are or differences between the s!ting
graded a pían1 between 1993
enang, Malaysia (1 9 8 ~ )outside ; San
- - -. - -.- - - -
.
-.
.. -
testing plants.
.
(www.intel.cwn); Michael Mortimore and Sebastidi VRrgara,"Targehng Wirm&s: Can FDl policy help developing countries industrialire?", Eumpean Journal of Developmenf Research h press, 2004; Untted Ndhuns Conference an Trade and Dewlopment (UNCXD), World Inwsfmcnt Report 2002, TransnaUonal' Corporations arid E x w r f Gompe!itrvcncss (UNCTAD,WtR/2DO22),New Yottú'Gcncva. 2002. United Nations gublica:ion, Sales No. E.02.1l.D.4.
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
73
Lastly, i t should be: borne in mind that smaIl developing ecoilomies face additional challenges in attracting FDT. Ry definition. they are unlikely t o catch the attention of market-seeking TNCs. Their domestic rnarkctx arc nnt big cnough t o cnahlc them tu reach [he levels of productive efficiency demanded by the kinds o l operations that can give them a foothold io the global market and make them major competitors. They often start their industrialrzation processes with simple, labourintenxivc activitics such as apparcl manufacturc,and scck to conclude trade agreements or 10 join integration arrangements to expand their markets, with the aim of
It is Important to note that in today’s world, small countries are gradually becoming the nm-m. IvVorldwide, R7 countrieq have fewer than 5 million inhabitants, 58 have fewer than 2.5 million and 35 have fewer than half a millitm. To put it wtithcrway, halflie world’scountries have populations smaIler than that of the staCe of Massachusetts in h e URited Sbtates. Some sinall countries h a w been very siicce~ssfulin attracting ISTP nodes of efficiency-seeking TNCs and in upgrading the actiwties carricd out hy thwc ndcs. The best-known cases are rhose of Ireland (see box D.2) and Singapore {hlL 2 0 ) . BI Latin America small countries account for more than half the total, especially in the Cariihhcan Basin, yet none of them has even remotely approached the success of Ireland or Singapore.
strengthening their i n d u ~ t r i a l i i - a t i mproccsses and enabling leading domestic firms to evolve into global players.
Bux 11.2 IRELAWQ’S EXPERIENCE IN ATTRACTING EFFICIENCY-SEEKINGFDI Since the 1990s Ireland has beeq irnplemnenYingan industrialization
IslecTronics, cornpifiers and tslwnmmunicatlon?) The eptity
ripment and pars -, I U ~ P and S
hetcrnging :o non-Furopea United SDtctCsj imstors
financing end 27 qill
valvss
=
*
+ + +
0.9 1.:
14
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and t3e Caribbean [€CLAC). on thc
ed;$on. a Fur more delails un ihe export structure, see fable It. I.
[‘) Gruups nf products thsf wRre among +he.W fa t-grwing v:orld imports, Groups in which Ireland galnddlloct rnarkel share in world irnpcrts, 1965-2001
{+):(-)
basis of h T r a d e C A N software, 2002
ECLAC
74
neerz and technicians;
1985 and ZOOI,white
ts non-resource-based
ds high-technology gained market share for each of its 10 principal export products, many of which were linked to the ncw focus of domestic policy. Between 1985 and 2001 the contribution of some of the country's piority exporfs -automatic data processrng machincs (SITC group 752), park thereof (group 759) a& telecommunications equipment [group 764)- to total exporl vafue rose fjom B I 2W/, SInca 1 QR O Ieaadlng hrdgn exporters in Ireland have been in the efectronlcs and computer industry (Intel. Dell, Microsoft. Gateway, AppIe, EMC. 3Cam and Motorola) Together, these firms account lor more than a third of totat rncrchandisc expcrts by foreign cornpanics and for ovcr ;Ififth of total exports. In 1990 Intel decided to open thc first of its two manufamring plants in Leixlip to serve the European market. The sic sclcction was based on the large p o d of qualrfind workers,
IBSS
capacities as key fwturu vf compeiitiveness To comgtem uccess in attractiny #e aboveescrrbed manulactunny aclrviltes. the uthoritics arc trying hard to mmct ervices, especially fhose retated to iiiformation teclinoloyy and the business world.The results speak for mserves: Intel's decision to ablish its European Operations rr;rc in lrcland att.ttcsts to thc my's prorcn competitiveness in iucring cusfomcr support SCWICES ared services and call centres-. as I a5 its leadership in Europe in
power, and the existence af businessfriendly g m m e n t policies. That decision gave a strong boost to the IDA objective of attracting efficiencyseeking FDI in the electronics industry. In 2003 Ireland's FD1 inlake reached a record high of U S 2 4 . 4 billion -more than double the amount received m 2002- and made thal country one of the worlds 1O leading FDf rcapiaits Thc FDI stock swcllcd from USS 32 billion to US$ 757 billion behveen 1980 and 2002 This investmmt is highly cancentrated in terms DI origin WO thirds comes from thR Metherlands, the United StaWs and the Unifert Klngdm, and IE channeltad ma:nly Into tJ?n plw,trical, elacfmntc, chem i j l l and publishing industries, which are markedly export-oriented. Foreign firms have accounted for the bulk of the county's expor* (warly 90: in 1999) In fad, trvo thirds of Irdsnd's lcadding cxpnrl firms are breign (E-SriefL'hlCTAD, UNCTAD PRESS~EW2OOG'OOG.i9 February 2004) lretand Is continuing to consolIda& rts strategy of knowledge-based dw&pnent, with emphasls nn the
firms more deeply in the local ~otaornyand to promote the internationalizationof their suppliers Business parks providing world-class services have been built in various parts of the country, wh:te IDA acts as an intermediary between academic Institiitions and IorRign companles In meetng the needs ot high-fechnnlngy tndhstmes.
I
..
,
.
.
. - ,
.
,-
,
..
.
.
75
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
B. EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS IN COSTA RICA, HONDURAS,JAMAICA ANDTHE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC which had accounted for most of the export basket up until the mid- 1990s.As a result of the opening of the Intel microprocessor plant, high-technology exports soared from 3.3% of total sales in 1995 to 28.1% in 2001 (having reached 29.5% in 1999). In 2001 the 10 principal products represented 67.4% of total exports, with the most sophisticatedelectronics manufactures (SITC groups 759 and 776) accounting for 24.4% (25.8% in 1999), while the share of apparel, as an example of low-technology manufactures, amounted to 7.7%. Thanks to this performance, Costa Rica gained market share for all of its 10 leading exports, not to mention the fact that 6 of these products were among the fastest-growing in world trade. Without a doubt, the country has become a shining example of how economies can progress towards better
The establishment of ISIP nodes in the Caribbean Basin has had an impact on each of the four countries selected for this analysis, whose participation in ISIP varies from one country to another, as do the impacts generated. One of the most striking effects is on the international competitiveness of the host economies. Between 1985 and 2001 Costa Rica’s share of the world import market rose considerably, from 0.07% to O. 12%, with a peak of 0.13% in 1999 (see table 11.1). Over that period its export structure changed: after having been heavily tilted towards natural resources in 1985 (67.5%), it was dominated by non-resource-based manufactures in 2001 (56.5%). High-technology manufactures in Costa Rica showed an interesting pattern of brisk growth and progressively replaced low-technology manufactures,
Table 11.1 COSTA RICA: SHARE OF WORLD IMPORTS AND EXPORT STRUCTURE, 1985-2001 (fexentaues)
I. Market share II. Export structure Natural resources a Natural-resource-based manufactures Non-resource-based manufactures - Low technology - Mid-level technology e - High technology Other 111. 10 principal exports, by contribution 057 Fruit and nuts (not including oil nuts), fresh or dried 759 Parts, n.e.s., for use with machines in groups 751 or 752 776 Electronic cathode lamps, tubes and valves 846 Undergarments, knitted or crocheted 071 Coffee and coffee substitutes 872 Medical instruments and appliances 842 Outer garments, men’s and boys’, of textile fabrics 292 Crude vegetable materials, n.e.s. 058 Fruit, preserved, and fruit preparations 931 Special transactions and commodities not classified according to kind
h
i
+
1985
1990
1995
1999
2001
0.07 100.0 67.5 7.6 24.1 14.5 6.3 3.3 0.7 62.6 30.2 o. 1
0.07 100.0 57.5 6.5 34.9 25.4 6.0 3.5 1.o 62.2 31.9 0.0 o. 1 5.4 13.2 0.3 5.3 4.0 1.3
0.09 100.0 49.8 9.8 38.9 27.0 8.0 4.0 1.4 60.4 28.6 0.1 0.1 6.8 10.6 1.1 6.0 4.1 2.0
0.13 100.0 32.9 8.5 55.9 18.3 8.1 29.5 2.5 68.7 20.5 20.8 5.0 4.9 5.5 1.7 3.5 2.5 2.1
0.12 100.0 31.7 9.1 56.5 18.4 10.0 28.1 2.5 67.4 20.5 13.6 10.8 4.6 4.2 3.6 3.1 2.5 2.3
0.7
1.o
2.2
2.2
* * *
+ + +
* *
+ +
+ +
2.8 23.9 0.0 2.0 2.5 0.5
*
+
0.5
+
o. 1
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of the TradeCAN software, 2002 edition. Product groups are based on the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC), Rev. 2. a Includes 45 simply processed commodities; includes concentrates. Includes 65 groups: 35 groups of agricultural/forestry products and 30 groups of other products (primarily metals -except steel-, petroleum products, cement, glass, other). Includes 120 groups representing the sum of + e + f. Includes 44 groups: 20 in the textiles and apparel category and 24 others (paper products, glass and steel, jewellery). e Includes 58 groups: 5 in the automotive industry, 22 in the processing industry and 31 in the engineering industry. Includes 18 groups: 11 in the electronics category and 7 others (pharmaceuticals, turbines, aircraft, instruments). Includes 9 groups not classified according to kind (mostly in section 9). (*) Groups of products that were among the 50 fastest-growing in world imports, 1985-2001. i (+)/(-)Groups in which Costa Rica gained/lost market share in world imports, 1985-2001.
76
ECLAC
conditions in the framework of assembly operations, since it upgraded these activities in two major steps: from natural resources to apparel and from apparel to electronics. The Dominican Republic saw its share of the world import market increase from 0.08% to 0.09% between 1985 and 2001 (see table 11.2). In 1985 its export structure was dominated by natural resources (24.6%) and naturalresource-based manufactures (23.1 %). By 2001 this situation had changed so radically that non-resourcebased manufactures had come to represent the bulk of the country’s exports (82.9%). The fastest-growing exports were low-technology manufactures, whose share expanded from 28.2% to 61.6%. In 2001 the country’s 10 leading exports accounted for 72.2% of its total exports. Of these, apparel (SITC groups 842, 846, 843 and 845) and other manufactures (SITC groups 872,772 and 897) represented 56.6% of the total. The country has gained market share for 8 of its 10 leading exports, 6 of which are among the fastest-growing in world trade. The Dominican Republic, which was once a minor natural resource exporter, has become a major apparel exporter.
Honduras’s international competitiveness improved appreciably between 1985 and 2001, during which time its share of the world import market rose from 0.05% to 0.07% (see table 11.3). Its export structure underwent a major shift, moving from a strong dependence on natural resources (74%) and natural-resource-based manufactures (18%) in 1985 to a heavy concentration in non-resourcebased manufactures (70%) in 2001. The fastest-growing of these manufactures were low-technology products, which jumped from 5.2% to 65.2% of total exports over the period under consideration. In 2001 the country’s 10 leading exports represented 81.7% of its total external sales, with most of that share accounted for by apparel (SITC groups 846, 845, 842, 843 and 844) and electrical equipment (SITC group 773), which together represented 62.6% of the total, while natural resources (SITC groups 057, 071 and 036) continued to lose ground. As a result of this change, Honduras has gained market share for 8 of its 10 leading exports, 5 of which are among the fastest-growing in world trade. Of all the new exporters of apparel in the Caribbean Basin, Honduras boasts the best performance.
Table 11.2 DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: SHARE OF WORLD IMPORTS AND EXPORT STRUCTURE, 1985-2001 (Percentages)
I. Market share II. Export structure Natural resources a Natural-resource-based manufactures Non-resource-based manufactures - Low technology - Mid-level technology e - High technology Other Ill. 10 principal exports, by contribution 842 Outer garments, men’s and boys’, of textile fabrics 846 Undergarments, knitted or crocheted 843 Outer garments, women’s, girls’ and infants’, of textile fabrics 872 Medical instruments and appliances 845 Outer garments and other articles, knitted or crocheted 122 Tobacco, manufactured 671 Pig iron, spiegeleisen and sponge iron 772 Electrical apparatus for making and breaking electrical circuits 897 Jewellery, goldsmiths’ and silversmiths’ wares and other articles 612 Manufactures of leather or of composition leather
1985
1990
1995
1999
2001
0.08 100.0 24.6 23.1 39.2
0.09 100.0 9.1 10.1 77.1
9.9 1.1 12.9 31.2 4.6 4.7 4.8 0.0 0.8 1.6 7.7
0.07 100.0 13.5 10.4 69.7 49.6 18.5 1.6 6.2 59.5 11.6 7.0 8.8 3.7 4.1 1.2 10.1
16.2 2.4 3.6 65.1 14.4 11J 9.3 6.3 5.1 1.9 5.0
0.09 100.0 6.0 9.2 81.9 62.0 16.8 3.1 2.9 72.7 16.4 13.7 8.6 7.0 6.8 4.6 3.8
0.09 100.0 5.4 8.8 82.9 61.6 17.3 4.0 2.9 72.2 17.5 12.7 8.6 7.5 7.0 4.5 4.4
*
1.1
3.4
3.6
5.0
4.3
*
3.1 2.8
4.1 5.5
3.1 5.3
3.3 3.5
3.3 2.4
28.2
h
*
* *
58.5
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of the TradeCAN software, 2002 edition. Product groups are based on the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC), Rev. 2. a Includes 45 simply processed commodities; includes concentrates. Includes 65 groups: 35 groups of agricultural/forestry products and 30 groups of other products (primarily metals -except steel-, petroleum products, cement, glass, other). Includes 120 groups representing the sum of + e + f. Includes 44 groups: 20 in the textiles and apparel category and 24 others (paper products, glass and steel, jewellery). e Includes 58 groups: 5 in the automotive industry, 22 in the processing industry and 31 in the engineering industry. Includes 18 groups: 11 in the electronics category and 7 others (pharmaceuticals, turbines, aircraft, instruments). Includes 9 groups not classified according to kind (mostly in section 9). (*)Groups of products that were among the 50 fastest-growing in world imports, 1985-2001. i (+)/(-) Groups in which the Dominican Republic gained/lost market share in world imports, 1985-2001.
77
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 11.3 HONDURAS: SHARE OF WORLD IMPORTS AND EXPORT STRUCTURE, 1985-2001 (Percentages)
I. Market share II. Export structure Natural resources a Natural-resource-based manufactures Non-resource-based manufactures - Low technology - Mid-level technology e - High technology Other 111. 10 principal exports, by contribution 846 Undergarments, knitted or crocheted 845 Outer garments and other articles, knitted or crocheted 057 Fruit and nuts (not including oil nuts), fresh or dried 071 Coffee and coffee substitutes 842 Outer garments, men’s and boys’, of textile fabrics 843 Outer garments, women’s, girls’ and infants’, of textile fabrics 844 Undergarments of textile fabrics (other than knitted or crocheted goods) 036 Crustaceans and molluscs, whether in shell or not 122 Tobacco, manufactured 773 Equipment for distributing electricity
1985
1990
1995
1999
2001
0.04 100.0 67.3 12.0 19.5 16.1 2.7 0.6 1.o 70.6 4.9 0.9 33.5 15.7 3.1
0.05 100.0 39.7 8.1 51.2 46.7 3.7 0.8 0.9 76.4 15.8 9.4 13.3 13.6 6.0
9.07 100.0 23.6 7.3 67.4 62.6 3.7 1.2 1.4 80.6 29.8 13.3 6.7 9.3 5.4
0.07 100.0 20.0 7.6 70.0 65.2 4.0 0.8 2.2 81.7 29.8 17.1 7.0 6.7 5.2
*
+
0.05 100.0 74.0 18.0 7.5 5.2 1.7 0.6 0.6 70.5 0.9 0.0 36.7 24.5 0.2
*
+
0.1
1.8
5.0
4.7
4.7
+
0.9 6.2 1.o 0.0
2.3 7.4 1.o 0.0
6.0 5.6 1.3 0.4
5.1 3.4 1.8 1.1
4.3 3.4 2.0 1.5
i
* *
+ +
-
+
+ *
+
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of the TradeCAN software, 2002 edition. Product groups are based on the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC), Rev. 2. a Includes 45 simply processed commodities; includes concentrates. Includes 65 groups: 35 groups of agriculturaVforestry products and 30 groups of other products (primarily metals -except steel-, petroleum products, cement, glass, other). Includes 120 groups representing the sum of + e + f. Includes 44 groups: 20 in the textiles and apparel category and 24 others (paper products, glass and steel, jewellery). e Includes 58 groups: 5 in the automotive industry, 22 in the processing industry and 31 in the engineering industry. 1;lcludes 18 groups: 11 in the electronics category and 7 others (pharmaceuticals, turbines, aircraft, instruments). Includes 9 groups not classified according to kind (mostly in section 9). (*) Groups of products that were among the 50 fastest-growing in world imports, 1985-2001. i (+)/(-) Groups in which Honduras gained/lost market share in world imports, 1985-2001.
Lastly, Jamaica’s international competitiveness has tended to falter. Between 1985 and 2001 its share of the world import market slipped from 0.04% to 0.03% (see table 11.4). Between 1985 and 1995 its export structure changed somewhat, moving from a concentration in natural-resource-based manufactures (7 1.9%) at the beginning of the period to a growing emphasis on nonresource-based manufactures, which by 1995 had come to represent 36.7% of the total. Subsequently, however, between 1995 and 2001, natural-resource-based manufactures regained much of the ground they had lost (reaching 65.4%), while non-resource-basedmanufactures retreated (to 24.6%). In 2001 the country’s 10 principal products represented 84.3% of its total exports. Natural resources and manufactures based on these resources accounted for 64.6%, while apparel (SITC groups 846
and 845) represented 18.1%. The weakness of Jamaica’s performance is highlighted by the fact that only 5 of its 10 leading exports have gained market share, while only 4 of them are among the fastest-growing in world trade. Thus, in terms of international competitiveness, Jamaica’s results were very different from those of the countries considered above and, in its case, the apparel industry played a much more minor role. In the 1980s the economies of Costa Rica, Honduras, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic -like those of many Caribbean Basin countries- were essentially producers and exporters of natural resources. For this group of countries, changes in the structure of their external sales were even more important than increases in their export capacity. Natural resources -and manufactures based on them- became less and less important in relation to other
78
ECLAC
exports (temporarily, in Jamaica’s case). The sluggishness of traditional exports from Costa Rica (bananas and coffee), Honduras (bananas, coffee and shrimp), the Dominican Republic (ferronickel, sugar, tobacco and coffee) and Jamaica (bauxite, alumina and sugar) triggered efforts to promote the production and export of manufactures, generally under an export processing zone (EPZ) arrangement: These manufactures were usually produced by foreign companies seeking to improve the productive
efficiency and cost-effectiveness of their ISIP. In most cases, this resulted in the proliferation of labour-intensive activities such as the apparel industry, which enabled foreign firms to take advantage of the low level of local wages (compared to United States wages). Nonetheless, some countries made efforts to diversify the activities carried out in EPZs; clear examples of such countries are Costa Rica (electronics) and, to a lesser extent, the Dominican Republic (the Cyberpark initiative).
Table 11.4 JAMAICA: SHARE OF WORLD IMPORTS AND EXPORT STRUCTURE, 1985-2001 (Percentages)
I. Market share
h
1999
2001
0.04 100.0 8.6 71.9 17.8 11.7 5.3 0.7 1.6 73.8 50.2 2.6 1.3
0.04 100.0 8.5 63.3 26.7 22.5 3.5 0.6 1.4 79.9 48.3 7.5 6.6
0.04 100.0 9.5 51.6 36.7 32.0 3.9 0.8 2.0 79.7 37.6 19.5 4.7
0.03 100.0 8.5 59.0 30.1 26.4 3.4 0.3 2.3 83.2 37.3 16.2 5.8
0.0
0.0
0.0
6.4
+
6.0 4.0 4.0 1.6 0.8
5.7 3.4 4.3 1.6 1.5
5.4 3.5 3.3 1.6 I .6
-
0.8
1.1
1.4
2.1
1.6
+
*
+
+ -
+
*
1995
8.1 5.4 2.1 2.1 1.2
i
*
*
1990
0.03 100.0 8.2 65.4 24.6 20.8 3.4 0.4 1.8 84.3 45.4 12.1 6.0 5.4 4.8 3.8 2.6 2.4 2.1
II. Export structure Natural resources a Natural-resource-based manufactures Non-resource-based manufactures - Low technology - Mid-level technology e - High technology Other 111.10 principal exports, by contribution 287 Ores and concentrates of base metals, n.e.s. 846 Undergarments, knitted or crocheted 845 Outer garments and other articles, knitted or crocheted 662 Clay construction materials and refractory materials 061 Sugar and honey 112 Alcoholic beverages 057 Fruit and nuts (not including oil nuts), fresh or dried 512 Alcohols, phenols, phenol-alcohols and their derivatives 071 Coffee and coffee substitutes 931 Special transactions and commodities not classified according to kind
1985
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of the TradeCAN software, 2002 edition. Product groups are based on the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC), Rev. 2. a Includes 45 simply processed commodities; includes concentrates. Includes 65 groups: 35 groups of agricultural/forestry products and 30 groups of other products (primarily metals -except steel-, petroleum products, cement, glass, other). Includes 120 groups representing the sum of + e + f. Includes 44 groups: 20 in the textiles and apparel category and 24 others (paper products, glass and steel, jewellery). e Includes 58 groups: 5 in the automotive industry, 22 in the processing industry and 31 in the engineering industry. Includes 18 groups: 11 in the electronics category and 7 others (pharmaceuticals, turbines, aircraft, instruments). Includes 9 groups not classified according to kind (mostly in section 9). (*)Groups of products that were among the 50 fastest-growing in world imports, 1985-2001. i (+)/(-) Groups in which Jamaica gained/lost market share in world imports, 1985-2001.
Foreign investmenl in Latin Amerlca and the Caribbean, 2003
79
In rhe 1980s macroeconomic imbalances and large external deficits prompted the aulhnrilicu nf t h e subregirrn's cnuntries [a devaIue local currencies on successive occasions. A t the same time they began hi introduce rerorrris aimcd at opening up and trberalizing their economies. Against this backdrop, orid arrnrd with significnrit cornpctitivcness p i n s attributable to rhc devaluations. gove.rnment authorities sought to
b o w l thc rolc nf exports as an engine of economic growth To that end, they undertook to expand and diversify the supply nf expnrt products, mainly by
creating incentives in the form of EP&, complemented by the special market acccss conditions offered by the IJnited States, particularly under the production sharing niechanism and the Canhhcan Basin Initiative (CBI) (sce hox 11.3)
THE UNITED STATES
ions for a United States-Central
nCe the mid-19Ws Costa RI~EI, Honduras, Jamaica and !he Dornrnic
United States market and, lo a resser
to tho United States market
With the signing 01 the Norlh
Bssln countries' conditions of access
ag reerne nl RXW nded trade benefits
miintries and lo cnhance the United States companies. Urdder thi
excluded, eltrninafed ta added and extended %-I
began in early 2U03 -&ter the United States Congress had vuted to give the Presideni Irade promotion (or "fast-
were substantially completed by Decewber 2003 In general CAFTA provides tariff- and quo!a-free access tn the United States for all Central
ao
ECLAC
ket-access schedules
a
"
wore
countries first obtatned special access
as a result oí the signing sf CARA.
Jamaica and Ihe Dominrcan Republic first obtained preferential access to the k u r w d n inarket under the LgmB Convention, between the Afncan, C preferences for entry i n l In response to pressurr
unltt 2008,after whicli tho parties will move graduaily towards lull IiCereIriatfoi, schodulcd for 2032 Launched in 1974. the GSP 1 5a programma of preferences yrari:ed by developed countries to d ~ e l ~ p i no gn w Under this arrangement, import duties are zinilatwaljv reduced fur 61 ude range cf products. prov,ded that at I R ~35% M o f each pruducfs value added :s gererated in the beneficiary cnimTry. 'The erthancerne?t of preferenccs under h a CRTPA means that products such as canrwd tuna, tcxtilc and apparel arh'cles. fwhear and jewltery, among others. will no longw be siiblect to imporl duties. 'This lirnif may be extended by an adiitlonal 100 million SME of Bbric i i 2004 as a WIJ~I d a credit obtained h wiebv of increawd purctwses of United Stales labrcc and thread Su+sequen+ly,it cohld increase by 2UU 1nliroii SME a \ear, without IlrnltS.
In mnht of thc Caribbean Basin countries export promotion rnechanismq h a w had similar features. Swting in the mid-1980s the four countricv crnisidered here cstahlihxl legal franiewarks for LPZs that gavc generous temporary tax bn.akh to companies operating in those zones. To complement the EPZs thcy cskhlished temporary admission regimes ihat allowed the diity-fre entry of inputs and machinery uwd i n producing goods for expwt. These instruments dovetailed perfectly with the production sharing mechanism introduced by the United Statcs (NIX table 11.3. At the same time, these CLNITItriGS established regdazory framcwork? to eiicourage and facilitate the entiy offoreign fmm. In this way, thcy gradually began
to strcriptlien the institutional framework for prnrnoting investmenf and hooktirig exports. Specialized agencies were set up for this purpose. including the Corn Rican Investment Board (ClNUL;) and t h c Forcipti Trade Corporation (PROCOMER) i n C o s t a Rica, thc
Foundation for Investment and Dewlopment of Exports IFLDE) iii Honduras, the Investment Promr)tiori Office (OPI) I R the Dominican Republic and the Jamaica Promotrons Corporation IJAMPRO) in Jamaica. CINDE has been particirlady successful, since it has played an active role in seeking out investors to jurnp-slart certain strategic sectors C I FLhc Costa Rican economy. In facr. I t was instsuinental t n bringing electronics h m s . most notably Intel, to Costa Rica (see box 11.4).
81
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 11.5 PRINCIPAL INCENTIVES OFFERED IN EXPORT PROCESSING ZONES (EPZs) IN COSTA RICA, THE DOMINICAN HEPUBLIC, HONDURAS AND JAMAICA
Costa Rica
Exemption from import duties on raw malerials, machinery and
H nnduras
Jamaica
Yes, for 15 years
Yes
Yes
Yes, for 7.5 years Yes, for 15 years
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
Dominican
RCpUbl¡C
Yes
equipment used in the production process Exemption from export taxes Exemption from prnflt tams
Yes Yes, b r 8 years for new investments; 75% for reinvestment
Exemption from local excise taxes Exemption from capital taxes Exemption from profit remittance taxes
Ys S Yes. for 10 years
Yes
Yes
Source Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
11.3"
THE COSTA RICAN INVESTMENT BOARD (ClND THE COUNTRY'S SUC
In t982 the efforts of pmmh Rican business peoyle lec! to the establishmcnt of tho Costa Rican
and& skilled Iabour. In f 993 CINDE chose three key $ti e l e c h a l , electronics and
.
,.
.
.
...................
-.
industries microelectronics, medical centres and software dcvclopmcnt.
slralegy p r u v d to be particularly sound, since it led fo significant
researchersfiho
operaffons in t h ~country. i Moremr, Itiar:ks to its non-gowmmental stattls,
its 20 pars of experie as bcen quick to ada
8r
c circumstances, CINDE. deci
the Caribbean (EL
.or.cr); Andr6s Rod got there, the irnpa
82
ECLAC
Thus, TNCs (primarily United States ones) invested in setting up new ISIP nodes to take advantage of the tax incentives granted by local authorities, special access to the United States market, low-cost labour’ and proximity to the North American market.2Consequently, a growing
share of exports began to be effected under special EPZ regimes, so that apparel, electrical and electronic products and other labour-intensive manufactures quickly became some of the leading exports, bound mostly for the United States market (see table 11.6).
Table 11.6 COSTA RICA, HONDURAS, JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: GEOGRAPHICAL DESTINATION OF TOTAL EXPORTS, 1985-2002
(Percentages) Costa Rica
Honduras
Jamaica
~______
United States European Union Latin America Asia (incl. Japan) Other Total
Dominican Rewblic
1990
1995
2002
1990
1995
2002
1990
1995
2002
1990
1997
2002
45.7 29.5 16.5 2.3 6.0 100.0
40.1 30.7 21.2 33 4.6 100.0
49.6 25.8 18.2 5.3 1.0 100.0
52.8 21.8 6.4 5.1 13.9 100.0
48.4 22.3 19.3 3.2 6.9 100.0
69.5 5.8 13.9 1.2 9.6 100.0
28.3 31.8 8.4 0.9 30.6 100.0
44.8 24.1 5.6 4.2 21.2 100.0
28.2 32.3 7.0 5.7 26.8 100.0
66.8 19.6 3.8 6.7 3.2 100.0
83.3 6.0 3.1 2.0 5.6 100.0
85.0 7.5 3.4 1.7 2.4 100.0
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of informationfrom InternationalMonetary Fund (IMF), Direction of Trade Statistics Yearbook 2002, Washington, 2002.
Although the phenomenon is not fully reflected in statistics, the development of the export sector in a number of small Caribbean Basin economies has to a large extent mirrored FDI inflow^.^ The characteristics of this development in recent years imply that a large proportion of FDI has been channelled into manufacturing activities, particularly those associated with efficiency-seeking TNCs. Moreover, the share of United States capital is biggest in countries that have increased their capacity to export manufactured or assembled products. This pattern shows that there is a
*
strong synergy between trade and investment, as complementary elements in catering to specific markets. This causal relationship is most evident, in quantitative terms, in the case of Costa Rica. Between 1997 and 2003 65% of total FDI inflows were concentrated in manufacturing activities -including categories such as electronic components and medical devices-, all under EPZ arrangements (BCCR, 2003). In Honduras and the Dominican Republic, foreign firms have been the dominant stakeholders in EPZs. As of late
The impact of low wages is relative. In 1998, according to data from Werner International, Inc., hourly garment-industry wages were highest in Costa Rica (US$2.52), lowest in Honduras (US$0.91) and between the two extremes in the Dominican Republic (US$ 1.48). Among the 25 countries in the world for which this information is available, Costa Rica ranked 13th, the Dominican Republic ranked 18th and Honduras ranked 25th. The United States was in fifth place, with an hourly wage of US$ 10.12 in this industry (Mortimore, 2003). Firms can also take advantage of these benefits by outsourcing assembly operations to specialized firms (foreign or domestic) located in EPZs. The most sophisticated option in this regard is the so-called “full-package’’ model, which enables firms without an ISIP of their own -such as large retail chains- to order the finished merchandise directly from a supplier that produces it according to the design or instructions of the buyer. These services are not limited to the assembly of imported inputs, but also include other stages of production such as design, input selection and distribution of the finished product. This phenomenon is most common in East Asia and is starting to appear in Mexico, but there have been no cases of this type of activity in the Caribbean Basin (ECLAC, 2000; Gereffi, 2000; Gereffi, Bair and Spener, 2002; Gereffi and Memedovic, 2003; Gereffi and Bair, 2002; and Mortimore, 2002). The real inflow of foreign investment to EPZs is hard to quantify, especially in comparative terms, owing to differences in the rules for recording such inflows and to the fact that machinery and equipment -like imported inputs- are deemed to be only temporarily present in EPZs .
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
83
2002 73% of all EPZ investments in the Dominican Republic (US$ 1.214 billion) had been made by foreign companies, 80% of which were based in the United States. These investments were highly concentrated in just a few economic activities: apparel (37%), electronics (14%), medical equipment and instruments (12%) and tobacco and tobacco products (1 1%) (CNZFE, 2003). Similarly, 73% of the firms operating in Honduras’s EPZs are foreign; 38% are based in the United States and nearly 30% are based in Asia (Hong Kong, Taiwan Province of China, China and the Republic of Korea). Most of these firms (61.5%) are in the garment industry (BCH, 2003).4 Thus, the bulk of United States investment in Costa Rica, Honduras and the Dominican Republic is export-oriented and is aimed principally at supplying the United States
market. Lastly, investment in Jamaica’s manufacturing sector -more specifically in the textile and apparel articles subsector-, after having been the fastest-growing FDI segment since the mid-l980s, began to decline sharply and steadily in response to the country’s fragile economic situation. In summary, mounting international competition and the response of TNCs, which opted to establish and extend international system of integrated production, have opened up new opportunities for small economies located near large markets. The Caribbean Basin countries have tried to seize this opportunity by taking steps to facilitate inflows of FDI from efficiency-seeking TNCs, particularly in the apparel subsector.
C. STRATEGIES OF EFFICIENCY-SEEKINGTNCsIN COSTA RICA, HONDURAS, JAMAICA ANDTHE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
In recent years the attractiveness of Costa Rica, Honduras, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic to TNCs has changed significantly as a result of a variety of factors: the policies of host countries (export incentives), the policies of capital-supplying countries (special market access) and the new business strategies of companies seeking to establish ISIP that will enable them to reach major markets quickly, efficiently and at the lowest possible cost. Accordingly, TNCs chose some of these economies as sites for the production or assembly of manufactured goods in the framework of their ISIP. United States firms, in particular, have made increasing use of offshore assembly to cut production costs as a way of staying competitive against their main rivals, both foreign and domestic. In so doing, they have tried to defend their market share in the United States
and enhance their competitiveness by taking advantage of low-cost assembly operations while maintaining high levels of production and employment within the country, which otherwise would not have been possible. The upshot is that United States TNCs have become key engines of investment and export growth in many Caribbean Basin countries. In the case of trade in manufactures -both finished products and inputs-, United States involvement is even greater and is concentrated in a small number of activities: apparel, electrical and electronic articles, medical equipment and other manufactures in the footwear and sporting goods categories, among others. In 2002 this set of products represented 75% of the Dominican Republic’s exports to the United States, nearly 80% of Honduras’s, about 60% of Costa Rica’s and 33% of Jamaica’s (see table 11.7).
The Multi-Fibre Arrangement of the 1970s allowed countries that were major garment importers to set quotas for their supplier countries to keep their own clothing makers from being displaced. Asian exporters were among the most active in setting up operations in different EPZs to take advantage of the local economies’ quotas in major markets.
84
ECLAC
Table 11.7 UNITED STATES: LEADING MANUFACTURES IMPORTS FROM COSTA RICA, HONDURAS, JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, BY TWO-DIGIT SITC CODE, 1990-2002a (Percentages and millions of dollars)
84: Articles of apparel and clothing accessories
77: Electrical machinery, apparatus and appliances and electrical parts thereof 87: Professional, scientific and controlling instruments and apparatus 89: Miscellaneous manufactured articles
Subtotal of the leading manufactures imports (percentages)
Total United States imports (millions of dollars)
1990
1995
2000
2002
38.1 23.3 41.7 41.9 4.2 0.0
41 .O 64.8 63.4 51.8 5.8 0.5
23.3 78.2 42.5 55.8 34.6 2.3
23.2 76.7 33.2 52.2 22.7 2.2
Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic
5.4 0.6
6.1 2.0
8.5 5.2
7.5 10.9
4.6 3.8 1.9 0.4 5.3 46.7 25.2 42.1 57.2
8.4 4.5 1.5 0.4 6.0 53.3 66.8 63.8 72.3
8.3 1.7 0.9 0.3 4.7 64.8 81.4 42.8 77.3
8.7 2.9 0.9 0.3 6.6 59.7 79.8 33.5 75.0
Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic
1 006 486 564 1 725
1 842 1441 838 3 385
3 555 3 o91 631 4 378
3 146 3 262 373 4 167
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information from the United States InternationalTrade Commission (USITC), USlTC Interactive Tariff and Trade Data Web, version 2.6.0, January 2004. a All USITC figures are based on SITC, Rev. 3, unlike the figures generated by the TradeCAN software used previously, which are based on SITC, Rev. 2. Includes office machines and automatic data processing machines (division 75). Basically includes jewellery, goldsmiths’ and silversmiths’ wares and other articles of precious or semi-precious materials (group 897); articles of plastics (group 893); and baby carriages, toys, games and sporting goods (group 894).
A major determinant of these results has been the production sharing mechanism. Operations of this type are part of the global efforts being made by United States TNCs to cut manufacturing costs, especially in North America and the Caribbean Basin. Imports with United States content can enter the United States either duty-free or at a reduced tariff under the production sharing provisions of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS), chapter 98 (formerly referred to as the 807 programme and now known as HTS 9802). While the
goods covered by these provisions represent only 6% to 10% of total United States imports, they account for a very sizeable share of the Caribbean Basin countries’ exports: 30% to 40% of their total exports to the United States, and a much bigger proportion in the case of manufactures, particularly apparel (see table 11.8). Indeed, between 85% and 96.5% of the Caribbean Basin countries’ garment exports to the United States are effected under the production sharing mechanism (see table 11.9).
85
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 11.8 COSTA RICA, HONDURAS, JAMAICA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: SHARE OF GOODS COVERED BY PRODUCTION SHARING PROVISIONS OUT OF TOTAL UNITED STATES IMPORTS, 1980-2002
(Percentages)
Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic
1980
1985
1990
1995
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
11.1
18.5 6.7 21.8 28.9
30.8
38.3 46.9 54.4 57.8
30.8 63.0 52.4 63.1
21 .o 69.4 45.6 65.2
25.1 61.1 38.0 62.3
30.3 49.0 39.6 49.8
22.1 33.3 30.3 37.1
... ... 11.8
... 28.4 40.3
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information from the United States InternationalTrade Commission (USITC), USITC lnteractive Tariff and Trade Data Web, version 2.6.0, January 2004.
Table 11.9 UNITED STATES: APPAREL IMPORTS UNDER THE UNITED STATES-CARIBBEAN BASIN TRADE PARTNERSHIP ACT (CBTPA), SELECTED COUNTRIES, 2001a (Thousands of dollars) _
_
_
~
~
Production sharing Other CBTPA preferencese
CBTPA
9802.00.80.44b Honduras Dominican Republic El Salvador Guatemala Costa Rica Nicaragua Haiti Jamaica Other Total ~~
921 579 944 014 559 272 137 712 325 583 42 229 112 663 107 673 16 017 3 166 742 _
_
_
_
~
9820.1 1.039820.1 1.18c
Other 9802.00.80d
537 078 581 844 371 813 278 681 76 142 37 661 31 008 3 177 2 043 1 919 447
533 888 540 149 454 164 359 176 320 738 26 993 61 728 59 955 14 376 2 371 167
_ _ _ _ ~
_
_
_
_
~
~
1 499 8 925 3 468 3 039 5 101 24 O O 17 22 073 _ _ _ _ _ _ ~ ~
Other
349 547 176 713 223 012 825 370 21 122 267 433 10 972 10 709 8 525
1 893 403
Total
2 343 591 2 251 645 1611 729 1 603978 748 686 374 340 216 371 181 514 40 978 9 372 832
Percentage of production sharing
85.0 91.8 85.9 48.4 96.5 28.6 94.9 94.1 79.2 79.6 _ _ _ ~
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of Ralph Watkins, “Production-sharing update: developments in 2002”, lndustry Trade and Technology Review, Office of Industries, United States International Trade Commission (USITC), July 2002, on the basis of official statistics from the United States Department of Commerce, Office of Textiles and Apparel. a The figures include apparel subject to the old Multi-Fibre Arrangement (replaced by the WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing), which accounted for 97% of total United States apparel imports from CBTPA beneficiary countries in 2001. H I S subheading 9802.00.80.44 accords duty-free treatment to apparel assembled in CBTPA beneficiary countries from fabrics wholly formed and cut in the United States from yarns wholly formed in the United States. Includes apparel imported duty-free from CBTPA beneficiary countries under six HTS subheadings. Includes apparel imported under HTS subheadings 9802.00.80.15 and 9802.00.80.16. e Includes apparel imported duty-free from CBTPA beneficiary countries under three HTS subheadings.
United States imports under the production sharing mechanism have fallen since 2000 because the Caribbean Basincountries have begun to receive more advantageous special treatment under other programmes (Dussel,
2004). After these countries lobbied for NAFTA parity, the United States began to implement the CBTPA, or enhanced CBI, in October 2000. The CBTPA incorporates all the benefits afforded under the CBI,
86
ECLAC
including both production sharing and the Special Access Program. What is newest and most important about this legislation is its treatment of textiles and clothing, along with the other segments that had been excluded from the benefits of the original CBI (Dussel, 2004). While the CBTPA represents a major improvement over the CBI in terms of market access, it is still significantly more restrictive than NAFTA, particularly because it imposes quotas and high tariffs on flat-weave fabric^.^ The conclusion of CAFTA should eliminate some of these problems, especially with respect to regional value added. Nonetheless, while it is true that these countries’ conditions of access to the United States market have progressively improved -to the point where tariff treatment is now equivalent to that enjoyed by Mexico under NAFTA-, the current situation is not enabling the local content and value added of the products exported
to the United States to increase sufficiently to allow for the industrial upgrading of these activities in the Caribbean Basin. Under the production sharing mechanism, the incorporation of local content was virtually nil and value added was extremely low; the CBTPA, for its part, did little to change that situation.6 This state of affairs is confirmed by the low utilization of the GSP, which requires a minimum of 35% local value added, and by the high United States content of the products which the United States imports from this group of countries under the production sharing mechanism (see table 11.10). Consequently, specialization in a single market, access to which depended essentially on a single instrument, meant that the benefits for host countries were fairly limited. The recent conclusion of CAFTA could partially redress this situation (see box 11.3).
Table 11.10 COSTA RICA, HONDURAS, JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: UNITED STATES CONTENT OF TOTAL UNITED STATES IMPORTS UNDER THE PRODUCTION SHARING MECHANISM, 1980-2002
(Percentages)
Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Dominican Republic
1980
1985
1990
1995
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
66.7
69.0 69.8 72.5 71.7
69.1
66.8 71.O 80.9 65.0
65.3 71.2 81.O 62.9
65.8 70.6 81.9 64.2
64.6 68.7 80.8 62.3
64.5 69.0 77.3 62.0
63.9 67.1 74.2 61.9
... ... 67.3
... 74.5 69.4
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information from the United States InternationalTrade Commission (USITC), USlTC Interactive Tariff and Trade Data Web, version 2.6.0, January 2004.
Below is a more in-depth analysis of some of the activities behind these international movements of merchandise and resources: apparel, electronics, medical equipment and certain services related to efficiency
seeking. This will shed more light on the benefits and problems related to the ISIP of efficiency-seeking TNCs in the Caribbean Basin.
The features that differentiate the CBTPA from NAFTA include the fact that it is temporary, is based on a variety of quotas and does not provide for a general “yarn forward” structure, meaning that the tariffs actually paid are much higher than the ones in effect under NAFTA. While NAFTA grants duty-free access to apparel assembled from fabrics formed and cut in the United States, the value added of such articles is subject to import duty under the CBTPA. The CBTPA allows beneficiary countries to carry out a slightly higher level of processing and to incorporate a somewhat larger proportion of non-United States components than would normally be permissible for entry under HTS heading 9802. In the case of apparel, these processes include cutting, stone-washing and other processes, while the allowable inputs now include limited amounts of Mexican and Canadian fabrics.
87
Foreigr! investmtment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
1. Textile and apparel articles: a rootless Industry7
The nianufacture of t d l e and apparcl articles was an important engine of industsialization in many developed countries íuid io some of thc hcst-pxfrinning emerging economies in the last ieew decades. More recently, as industrialization processes turned increasingly to more technologically complex activities. this industry's importance gradually diminished in the first group o f counlries and incrcascd in some countries of the second group. Even so, this activity became established as one
establishment of an industry run by lwca Othcrs R m used t
developed and refined th capabilities in the 1960s establtshirg close ties wi
apparel
lages to
of the fastest-growing segments in international trade. Some countries (mostly Asia11 nncs) madc the most of the opportunities it offered for as Iong as they had the necessary comparative advanlages (SEC hrix 11.5). Others (nearly all of them in h u n America) achieved high export volumes on the basis of this activity, but found thal this progress (lid not serve the purposes of industrial and technological upgrading (Mortimore, 2003 b; Gereffi, Spener arid Bair, 2002; Gcrcffi and Mernedwic, 2003).
manufacturers became betwoen united states apparel factories in As¡
88
ECLAC
with international subconeracting operations, M c x i o o has lacked the necessary infrastructurc for iull-
' 7 ¶:
assembly under the HTS 9802
pckaga supply and develop new pductron and rnarkcting niches is to forge linkages WitR lead firms that can supply the necessary resourccs and tutelage. In other words, Mexico needs to develop new and beller networks m order lo compete wifh East Asian suppliers for the Wniled Sta!es full package market.
,
iinlil October 2000.They therefore encntmtered lighter quota restrictrons, higher tariffs and mnre 1imi:ed
possibilities for vertical integration than Mexico. Nonetheless, they have had considerable success with export assembly. They are expading theh position in the United Stsfefi market, primarily through large assemhly plant
losing ground to Mexican firms that can export similar goods to the United State more quickly and cheaply They need to
States relailers and other stakchotdcrs Iif they are to acquire the skllls and resources they need to move into the more diversified aclivities associated with lull-package picduction.
Emomic Commissionfor Latin Americaand the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of Gary Gerefír md Olga Mernedwic, 'The Global Apparel Value Chain. What Prospects for Upgrading by Develupiriy Countries", Sec:oral Studios scrics, Vienna, United NaIions Industrial Development OrganizaTkm (UN4DO), 2003.
The U n i t e d Statcs apparel industry faced intense and growing cornpetitinn from Asian products. which forced the leahag apparel companies to rerlcfine their business skategies. Starting in the mid-1980sa number n f United S t a t c s Tirrns Iaunched a pracess of internarionalizing productinn. making use of the coriip~ ative didvantages offered by developing countrrcs and abstwhiag new technologies and organizational practices that enhanced rhe efficicncy CIS their global operations.Accordingly, there was a Iarpsmle transfcr of assembly operations trt locahns outside the United States and an increase in the share of imports in thc domestic clothing markcl. lmpurt penetration in the United States market, which W R S high to begin with, increased from 57% in 1997 to 74.5% in 2002 (AAFA3 2003).' Endeavours i n Asia were initially thc ninst common, hut lhuse operations were subsequently extended to other locations -4s a result, thc Arrng Kong
Special Administrative Region. the Rcpuhlic o f Korea and Taiwan Province of China gradually m w c d (rut or t h i s industry and into other, mme technotogy-intensive qegrncnts. Uetwern 3990 and 2002 thc Curibbean Basin countries doubled their share of the imported clothing market in the United States, from 8-5s to lt1,3%~ whik the Asian countrics saw thcir share slide froin 743% to 53"2%and Mexico consolidated i t s position as Ihc primary e ~ p u r tbase. with 13% o f that market. The standouts among the Central Amcricarl and Caribbeaii C U U I I ~ its I are Honduras, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala,E1 Salvadorantl C~ISIA Rica. Apparel accounts fur a v e q significant share of the external sales of thrcc of these countrics, particularly Honduras and the Doininicon Republic, i n which this indtistry xupplics about NI%and ovcr 50%. respectively, of exports to the United States (see table 11.1 1)
'I'hr sharp Joanilu~~k in cinployment in this induqtry rcftccts swccpmg chungts rn cluniestic clotliiilg prnrloclion in the United Statcs. Betwt'eri 1955 a i d 1995 thiq rlnwnrurn VAT relatlvcly gradual (Trurn 1.24 i r i i l t i u r i IO O Y lullhon jnbq:), bill between 1995 and 2007, thc nurriber d p b s fell off slrddmly, frnm 975,800 to 520.800 (AAFA. ZUUJ)
89
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 11.1 1 UNITED STATES: APPAREL IMPORTS (SITC, Rev. 3,841-845), BY COUNTRY OF ORIGIN, 1990-2002 (Millions of dollars and percentages) 1990
1995
1998
2000
2001
2002
1990
Millions of dollars Asia China Hong Kong Indonesia India Rep. of Korea Philippines Bangladesh Thailand Taiwan Province of China Viet Nam Malaysia Other Asian Mexico Caribbean Basin Honduras Dominican Rep. Guatemala El Salvador Costa Rica Nicaragua Jamaica Other Caribbean Other regions Total
1995
2000
2002
Percentages
16 355 3 064 3 813 615 570 2 163 950 419 424
21 357 4 477 4 223 1172 1 151 1 553 1431 996 1 022
26 O09 5 416 4 415 1 642 1531 1 763 1 686 1 493 1 436
29 986 5 907 4 454 2 034 1 787 2 023 1 836 1 933 1 803
29 759 6 080 4 153 2 178 1 738 1 928 1 830 1 923 1 807
30 087 6 646 3 861 2 025 1 903 1 792 1 768 1 754 1715
74.3 13.9 17.3 2.8 2.6 9.8 4.3 1.9 1.9
59.6 12.8 12.1 3.4 3.3 4.5 4.1 2.9 2.9
52.6 10.4 7.8 3.6 3.1 3.5 3.2 3.4 3.2
53.2 11.8 6.8 3.6 3.4 3.2 3.1 3.1 3.0
2 079 O 462 1 796 636 1 879 112 679 185 54 373 O 224 252 3 130 22 O00
1 808 8 667 2 849 2 743 5 229 931 1 688 676 568 729 74 414 149
1 877 22 707 4 021 6 486 7 994 1 895 2 263 1128 1 080 794 232 333 269 7 564 48 053
1 548 42 753 5 779 7 739 9 218 2 413 2 190 1 608 1 544 68 1 380 141 261 9 740 56 456
1 355 868 715 5 685 7 344 9 192 2 457 2 089 1 655 1 555 637 433 121 245
5 528 34 857
1813 41 772 5 583 8 329 9 279 2 399 2 328 1 479 1507 762 337 181 1 765 9 427 57 021
9.5 0.0 2.1 8.2 2.9 8.5 0.5 3.1 0.8 0.2 1.7 0.0 1.o 1.2 14.3 100.0
5.2 0.0 1.9 6.5 7.9 14.6 2.7 4.8 1.9 1.6 2.1 0.2 1.2 0.1 17.9 100.0
3.2 0.1 1.4 9.7 14.6 16.3 4.2 4.1 2.6 2.6 1.3 0.6 0.3 0.6 16.5 100.0
2.4 1.5 1.3 10 13.0 16.3 4.3 3.7 2.9 2.8 1.1 0.8 0.2 0.5 17.5 100.0
9 903 56 526
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information from the United States InternationalTrade Commission (USITC), USlTC Interactive Tariff and Trade Data Web, version 2.6.0, December 2003.
Nonetheless, the very nature of the production sharing mechanism (HTS 9802) and the characteristics of the incentives offered, which reflect the keen competition to attract FDI to the Caribbean Basin countries, have had the effect of keeping domestic value added very low (see table 11.9). Some 79% of United States apparel imports from the Caribbean Basin in 2001 entered under the production sharing arrangement, compared to 50% of those from Mexico and 1% of those from China (Watkins, 2002). In addition, given the importance of wages in the finished product, the transfer of assembly operations to locations with relatively cheap labour is an essential feature of TNCs’ efficiency-seeking strategies. In fact, apparel accounts for about 75% of the total duty savings achieved on United States merchandise
imports under production sharing provisions (Brookhart and Watkins, 2000). Thus, the garment industry’s existence in the subregion is basically contingent on wage levels, and there is little opportunity to make use of local physical inputs (Buitelaar and Padilla, 2000). The fact that the sector is forced to use expensive United States inputs casts doubt on these countries’ real competitiveness. What is more, the situation will be even more problematic when the transition period provided for in the WTO Agreement on Textiles and Clothing expires, owing to the expected massive inflow of inputs and finished products from Asia, primarily China. In addition to the changes that have taken place on the production side, marketing has also been significantly transformed. Buyer-driven chains have gradually
90
replaced producer-driven ones. In the United States market, large retailers (Sears, Wal-Mart, J.C. Penney, Kmart) and branded marketers (Nike, Polo, Tommy Hilfiger) have acquired more influence over the entire marketing chain (Gereffi, 2001; Sturgeon, 2002). In these circumstances, Asian suppliers took on a more important role by switching to full-package production, edging out United States clothing makers. This change strengthened domestic Asian firms that were capable of organizing all phases of apparel production -from inputs to completed products- and, in the process, boosted the development of the local production system. In contrast, the situation of this industry in the small Caribbean Basin countries is very different. In general, the manufacturers operating in these economies are subsidiaries of foreign branded manufacturers (especially of women’s undergarments) or domestic or foreign firms that compete for assembly contracts (particularly for men’s wear) from large United States retailers. This is why the full-package concept has not flourished in the Central American and Caribbean countries, since their competitive advantages are derived strictly from the characteristics that make them well-suited to final product assembly: EPZs, preferential access to the United States and low wages. There are three kinds of apparel firms in the Caribbean Basin, each of which approaches its competitive position differently: Large subsidiaries of United States TNCs that have set up ISIP nodes in the subregion. Examples of these are firms that manufacture apparel, especially undergarments, for export to the United States; these include leading branded manufacturers such as Sara Lee (Hanes, Bali, Playtex, L‘eggs), Fruit of the Loom (Fruit of the Loom, BVD, Gitano, Munsinger) and Warnaco (Warner’s, Olga, Lejaby). They usually have subsidiaries in three or four countries of the subregion. If the competitive position of their subsidiaries’ host countries changes, these firms react by adding or cutting back on assembly lines, without having to pull out of the site completely except in extreme circumstances. Accordingly, they add new assembly lines at sites where competitive conditions improve and cut back on them where such conditions worsen; Smaller United States manufacturers of other apparel items, which serve as subcontractors of bigger companies (either producers or buyers). These are generally companies that have been forced out of the United States under strong competitive pressure from Asian imports and have set up operations in the Caribbean Basin in a bid to survive. The ones
ECLAC
that operate at a single site tend to look for a better one when competitive conditions worsen. The “flyby-night” firms mentioned earlier are in this category ; Small domestic firms that can combine apparel manufacture for the domestic market with subcontracting for bigger firms (either producers or buyers). Since they usually have no subsidiaries in other countries, any downturn in competitive conditions tends to force them to engage in other activities in order to survive. Of these three categories of apparel firms in the Caribbean Basin, subsidiaries of large TNCs are the ones that are best able to adapt to changing competitive conditions in the subregion’s countries. In the four countries considered, this industry has had varying degrees of success in terms of apparel exports to the United States (see figure 11.1). Although the Dominican Republic was once the strongest performer, it has been overtaken by Honduras. Costa Rica was in second place until 1994, when a quota dispute arose with the United States government. Even though WTO ruled in favour of Costa Rica in the dispute, the Costa Rican apparel industry has lost momentum since then. Jamaica used to be in third place, but problems deriving from macroeconomic stability, such as the local currency’s appreciation against the United States dollar, caused the subsector to lose competitiveness, as reflected by the decline in apparel exports to the United States since 1996. Although Honduras ranked fourth in the early 1990s, it subsequently turned in the best performance because it offered the lowest wages in the industry. Thus, these four countries achieved widely diverging results over the period considered. In Honduras this industry has become highly specialized in knitwear, which represents 63.2% of its apparel exports to the United States and consists mainly of T-shirts, sweaters and brassieres, in addition to massmarket clothing. The Dominican Republic specializes in mass-market men’s wear -pants of all types, undergarments and T-shirts- and, to a lesser extent, women’s wear (pants and undergarments). Costa Rica’s apparel industry has focused primarily on knitted undergarments for women and girls, particularly brassieres, panties, nightdresses and pajamas, which account for more than 40% of the industry’s exports. Jamaica’s small production base is currently highly concentrated in T-shirts of knitted fabric, which represent just under half of its sales to the United States market. The apparel industry’s loss of competitiveness in Costa Rica, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic is also
91
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Figure 11.1 UNITED STATES: APPAREL IMPORTS (SITC, Rev. 3,841-845) FROM COSTA RICA, HONDURAS, JAMAICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, 1989-2002 (Millions of dollars)
3000 2500 2000 1500 1O00 500 O
1989
1
1990
1991
Costa Rica
1992
1993
1994 Honduras
1995
1996
1997
-4--Dominican
1998
1999
Republic
2000
2001
+Jamaica
2002
1
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis Óf information from the United States International Trade Commission (USITC), USlTC lnteractive Tariff and Trade DataWeb, version 2.6.0, December 2003.
attributable to external factors. Starting in 1994the impact of Mexico’s improved access to the United States market under NAFTA was most keenly felt in Costa Rica and Jamaica, especially in terms of their jeans exports (ECLAC, 2000, chap. IV). In contrast, the Dominican Republic’s shipments to the United States continued to grow, enabling it to reorganize production in its assembly plants and to modernize its facilities with new machinery, equipment and technology. Increased productivity, combined with the containment of labour costs, were key determinants of this phenomenon (Buitelaar, 2000). Despite these gains in terms of market share, the situation of the apparel industry in the Caribbean Basin countries is a far cry from what it has become in the Asian economies. For one thing, the former group of countries exports to only one market -North America, and particularly the United States- and the sector’s impact in terms of industrialization and development of the production system has been much less pronounced. In this regard, the very nature of the production sharing mechanism has exacerbated these problems by accentuating the fragility of the production system’s development and generating a form of competitiveness
that is temporary rather than lasting (Mortimore, 2003b; Vergara, 2004; Schrank, 2003). In none of the cases considered has the production sharing mechanism resulted in the development of major supply chains or of locally produced yarn, thread, fabric or accessories. Likewise, TNCs have done very little to boost industrial and technological upgrading in the host countries through technology transfer, production linkages or business development. Some progress has been made in terms of human resources training, but only from a strict “cost centre” approach. Lastly, the industry’s future prospects -particularly in Honduras and the Dominican Republic, where it is still very important- are not very promising, and questions arise as to the competitive development of this activity. The growth of competition as a result of China’s engagement in world trade and changes in some of the rules of international trade, such as the WTO agreement that export subsidies should be eliminated by 2007, the phase-out of the Multi-Fibre Arrangement and the phasein of new requirements under the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing, together with the loss of competitiveness vis-&vis Mexico in terms of rules of origin, labour costs, tariffs and transport costs, have darkened the outlook
92
ECLAC
for attracting new investment and strengthening export acti~ities.~ In summary, the four economies analysed started out in similar circumstances but achieved different degrees of success, as measured by their share of United States imports. All of them, however, share certain core
characteristics: on the positive side, they attracted important ISIP nodes of United States corporations; on the negative side, they did not reach the level of industrial and technological upgrading needed to sustain exports, and some of these countries are caught in the low-valueadded trap.
2. The electronics industry: a broken chain?
In the 1990s the presence of electronics-industryTNCs in the Caribbean Basin countries was concentrated in Costa Rica. As part of their strategy of efficiency seelung with a view to capturing export markets, several electronic components manufacturers chose Costa Rica because of its high-quality human resources, proximity to the United States market, appropriate service infrastructure,EPZs and special access to the United States market, basically through the production sharing mechanism. High-technology firms first came to Costa Rica in the 1970s, with the most notable arrival being Motorola. In the 1980s, while the subregion was going through a period of political and economic upheaval -including a number of civil wars-, Costa Rica was an exception, and therefore attracted new firms in the electronics subsector. However, this activity did not really take off, in the sense of attracting large inflows of FDI and generating an export boom, until the mid-1990s. In 1995 the country saw the arrival of the United States firms DSC Communications Corporation -which made the biggest manufacturing investment ever recorded in Costa Rica up to that timeand Sawtek Merrimac. As the first electronics firms were setting up operations in Costa Rica, the country was progressing towards the design of a national strategy for boosting certain areas of production. To that end, the authorities drew up proactive policies for channelling investment into the electronics industry. A determining factor in their change of orientation was a 1995 study, prepared by the World Bank’s Foreign Investment Advisory Service
(FIAS), that gave a positive assessment of the country as a possible site for investments in high-technology industries. The new strategy set the objectives of progressing towards skill-intensive activities and developing competitive advantages based on hightechnology activities. In fact, Costa Rica had been losing competitiveness in the apparel industry and its prospects in that area were not encouraging, given the implementation of NAFTA. The Costa Rican authorities therefore decided to redirect their efforts towards attracting FDI to certain incipient subsectors such as electronics. The country’s new image highlighted its political stability, geographical location and relatively high levels of education and human development, as well as the authorities’ commitment to a development strategy based mainly on electronics, in contrast to the prior emphasis on apparel. Thanks to the experience it had gained in facilitating the arrival of DSC Communications Corporation and Sawtek Merrimac, CINDE was able to play a key role in implementing the new strategy for attracting investment (see box 11.4).The crowning achievement in this regard was the arrival of Intel, the industry leader in the manufacture of microprocessors, whose decision to open a plant in Costa Rica helped to strengthen the new strategic approach. Intel’s arrival was significant not only because of the size and economic impact of its investment, but also because it raised the country’s profile as a possible site for other leading high-technology firms (see box 11.6).
Under the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, all countries with a GNP per capita of more than US$ 1,000 per annum must eliminate export subsidy programmes by 2007. This means that producers in the Dominican Republic will face much stiffer competition in the United States market. Moreover, under the Multi-Fibre Arrangement and the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing, apparel manufacturers will be subject to all the rules and procedures set out in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) by the end of 2004.
93
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
the "Intet effect' had been exclu
.. friendly environment, stream1 administrative procedures and, ow¡ to thc labour-intensiveness of the w to be performed I R the new plant, a lomtion well suited to a cost-cutting Mralegy (Mortimnre and Vcrgara. 2004). The significance of Intel's selection . -. .. . 01 tam nrca :s apparent rn tne iignt ot tts decisionmaking process (Shiels ZODO; Spar, 1998). Its long list of
.-
.
.
.
b k sites included both Asian countries {Indonesia, Singapore, 1 and rhailandj and Latin American (Mextco, Chile, Argentina, Brazil and Costa Rica). During fhe selection process the Costa Rican authorities decided to negotiate directly w company. They felt that Entsl's i pwfile fit the countv s new slrategy
the count
organtdron and targeting in i iiegobaEions with the firm. AIS irnporlant In this regard was t authorities' willingness to act and efficiently to accommoda
rade deficit in 19!
itive balance ii .ibuticm of tmde to P increased frr3rn 57OA in 1991 to re than 33% in 7999. Moreover, the
needs.
Among thc specific governmen1
.ons .inat T.acrlrW .. etBCF. the tirm'a .. . am
!ates marhol has changed in recent years as a direct Intel's impact (see table 11.1). Another aggregate effect is the one semd in terms of the CO
United States; the opening of cDnsula:es in !he Phitippims and Malaysia, whera Intel already had assembly and testlng plarts and thc cal1 Rstahlkhrnent of an exclus
site (Rodriguez-Clare. 2001). Even more $1 ynificmtly, several curnpantes (Hemec, Santek, Heliabikly, Prolek and Sensorlronics) have already set up operations in the electronics
. . ..
it1
1995. As the first fruit of !h
At Ihe sarna ti ries
in the cw
of firms such as 111I~to:olaand DSC
a v i s i l t j j the ttlen-Presi As Lhe evdluatiun progressed becane more m d more corivincd that the new plant should be tccafed America. As a rasult, !hP short list of candidates cansistsd .nainly of Fafin
-
'croecmomic levels. In [err:
American comMies including Bmzil, I
,
.
.
,
.
tn:eFs imptlci has at50 been agntfcanl at the microeconomic leve In ternis ot linkages with othw klnds activities, S O ~ Rof the flrm's suppliers. far axampla, have received dire training from Intd. revamped th
.
...
nnly :emailing A,pian countnes were Indonesia and Thailand After painstaxing study, the cornpebtlon M m e donm to h?exicoand Gosla Rica.
FDt inflows and e x p o k In initial investment amounted tn IISS400 millim and was rsflxted in *e country's growth rak: in I999 Cost3
changed their product lines as a result of Intel's arrival. Moreow, there is cvrdence that Intel has generated changes m the inpuls market hat
ECLAC
94
ow,
with the resu
International to Costa Rica. Thus, technology bansfer, production Iinkages and human resources and business developmenL albeil with differences in ferrns of their extent and
nature of the product. not much can bc cxpccted in terms of atpplylng physical inputs In the end, thR way 1 benefit from this type of investment I to attract a number nf investrnsnt
ission tor LLxtin America and the Caribbean (ECLACJ.
Cosld Rica nuw hosts some 50 electronics firms directly ernployln_e about !0,ofln tcchnicians alid profcssinnals (www,cinde,or.cr).In addition to Intel and the two pioneering companiea o~entionedearlier, Remec. Conair, Re1 lab¡lit y, Protek. Sensortronics and Colurplast have operations in the country. Intel “satellite” firms such a( RVSI, Ntirkk, Philips, Tiros and Delta Design haw. atso established suhsidiaricx thcrc. Ttie f i i . 1 1 1in ~ this group are the one5 that have given exports the higgcst b w s t and are Ihe main generators of employment i n EPZs, where pay levcls arc 2 0 9 higher than in the rest of the private sector (Robles, 2000). Thcsc firrnx have also enahlctl ii iiumber. of local companies to compete successfully in the software industry, making Cnstn Rica the leadingcxpurtcr (per capita) of this product in Latin America (Rodriguez-Clare, 200 1). The impact uf h e operations of Intel and other electronics firms is directly reflectcd hnth i n the spectacular grtiwth o1 exports and in the shift in the4 composition, I n terms of its market share rrF Norrh American (IJnitcd States and Canadian) electronics imports, Costa K m had a very small share until 1995. after which its share leapt from 0.05% in 1996 20 a peak of 0.48% in 1999 (see figirre 11 2). Major changes also took placc in i t s export structure (see table 11.1). In 200 I
I T S external salch r i T electronics, primarily rnicioprocessors, totalled US$ 1 .?I billian (26% cif t d exports) (www.procorrlet.conll. Thus, the dramatic upsiir~ein FDT and in electrtmich exports, together with the forinmion of an institutional strllcT11re capahhlc o f largctirip CI specific type of FDI. have made Corta Kica one o f t h e -'winners" i n term of enhanced competitiveness (ITKCTATI, 2f02). Costa Rica’s pursuit of the Intel investment enablcd it tu learri soirieirnposta~itlessons and to continue to wage ifs inverment prom’ofiwl currlpaig~~ consistently, in the contest of a better-defined national strategy. To thc cxkrit that t h c ctjuritry consolidates its strategic framework. firms may expand their operations and form a cluslcr nf intet~elatedactwilics. This plan entails a nuinber of risks, however, and demands ongoing assessment of ihc rmults with a vicw in making any changes deemed necessary. In practice, electronics firms occupy rnarkct SL,-~~ITlcllLs charactenxd by fierce inteniational competition, w i n g IOthe key role of technological innovation ir1 h i s itiduse. Since thcy hclong LO KIP, they need to take global kismsconcernin,a the a d v a n t a p ciFlncalirigin agiven cnuntr?. When this happens, the incentives offered by individual countries tu attrack these firins are less imprrrtant. This means that if advantages i n terms of
95
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Figure 11.2 COSTA RICA AND THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: MARKET SHARE OF THE ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS SUBSECTORS IN NORTH AMERICAN IMPORTSa (Percentages)
0.6
0.2
t
0.1
t
0.0
I
1 /
/
I
1985
I
I
1987
I
I
1989
I
I
1991
I
I
1993
I
I
1995
I
1
1997
1 4 Costa Rica -D- Dominican Republic
I
I
1999
I
2001
I
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information from the TradeCAN software, 2002 edition. a Includes 11 product groups in divisions 71, 75, 76 and 77 of SITC, Rev. 2.
human resources, local suppliers and other factors are not maintained and constantly regenerated, firms may decide to close their operations. Costa Rica has demonstrated a growing capacity to carry out a proactive strategy that demands coordination among its institutions and a commitment to national priorities and objectives and to finding ways to link these aims to the strategies of TNCs that are reconfiguring their global ISIP. The Intel experience shows how a small developing country can understand and visualize the strategies of TNCs with a view to coordinating its development policies with those strategies and achieving mutual benefits. In the future, this country’s primary challenge will be to attract more firms in order to form an electronics cluster and forge more linkages with the rest of the economy. The Dominican Republic has also begun to achieve solid growth in the electronics subsector, albeit on a considerably smaller scale (see figure 11.2). Electronics firms currently account for 5% of all the companies operating in EPZs, electronics exports amount to some US$500 million and investments in this area represent about 14% of the total (Vergara, 2004). In addition,
electrical apparatus for making electrical circuits (SITC group 772) has become the country’s seventh most important export (see table 11.2). Moreover, the Dominican Republic is trying to follow in Costa Rica’s footsteps by developing an FDI targeting strategy. The poor outlook for the development of the apparel industry has prompted the authorities to make some initial efforts to bolster TNC activities in high-growth, technologyintensive segments. Accordingly, to diversify EPZ activities and increase the use of high technology, the government, together with private investors, created the Santo Domingo Cyberpark. The aim of this, the first technological free-zone industrial park, is to use telecommunications infrastructure to lure manufacturers of computer hardware and software and medical instruments, in addition to providing a range of telecommunication services. In short, Costa Rica’s success in the field of electronics indicates that the apparel industry’s loss of competitiveness is forcing the Caribbean Basin countries to identify realistic options for designing and implementing the new policies that the situation demands.
96
ECLAC
3. Medical devices: the new frontier Costa Rica and, to a lesser extent, the Dominican Republic have begun to see the arrival of a new group of manufacturers: producers of medical devices. The key element attracting these new ventures is the availability of a well-educated, high-quality workforce at very competitive wages. About 15 medical instruments companies employing over 3,000 people are now located in Costa Rica. Between 1999 and 2002 the medical technology industry became the fastest-growing segment of the Costa Rican economy, with export growth of over 200%. Medical devices are the country’s fourth most important export (see table 11.1) and have gradually gained market share in North America (see figure 11.3). The principal foreign firms with locations in Costa Rica are Abbott Laboratories and Baxter Healthcare Corporation. In 1987 Baxter became the first company in this subsector to position itself in the Costa Rican market. It began production in 1991 and has continued to expand since then. It now manufactures some 200 products and employs nearly 1,400 people. Abbott Laboratories set up operations in the country in 1999, with a US$ 60-million investment. Today it has about 1,200 employees.
As in the earlier case of the electronics subsector, the Costa Rican authorities saw the arrival of these firms as an opportunity to create a production cluster for the manufacture of medical devices in the country. In 2002 they launched a project to design a specific action plan for better coordinating the factors that affect activities in the medical devices subsector, eliminating obstacles and seizing the opportunities identified as priorities. One of this industry’s advantages over electronics is that it is among the ones that purchase the most inputs on the local market. For this reason, special attention is being paid to the supplier chain which firms in this area are generating in the country. For example, Baxter buys plastic packaging or molds and certain other locally produced goods in Costa Rica. The medical instruments and appliances subsector is the one that makes the most use of high-value-added production chains and involves the widest participation by local firms. New investments in this industry are expected in the next few years, since these plants are among the most efficient in the world. In the case of the Dominican Republic, the rapid erosion of its competitiveness in this area (see figure 11.3) shows that success may be short-lived if it is not backed up by dynamic policies that are quick to rzspond to changes in the country’s comparative advantages.
Figure 11.3 COSTA RICA ANDTHE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: MARKET SHARE OF NORTH AMERICAN IMPORTS OF MEDICAL INSTRUMENTS AND APPLIANCES (SITC, Rev. 3,872) (Percentages) 10.0
1
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0 1985
1987
1989 +Costa
1991
1993
Rica -Et--
1995
1997
1999
2001
Dominican Republic
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information from the TradeCAN software, 2002 edition.
97
Foreign investment in Latin Amsrlca and the Caribbean. 2003
4. Efficiency seeking in the senrice secttor In recent years, given the global trend towards outsourcing and the ~xhriologicaladvances made in the ficlrl if telecommunications, the Caribbean Basin countries have attracted FDI for the establishrncnt nf conipariies providing specialized services. The workforce profile, beyond the availability of low wage levels, is of paramount importance Tor this type of activity. In general. these firms demand bilingual (English- and Spanishspeaking) personnel with specific knowlcdgc in the areas or inlimmatiun technology and electronics, among other qualifications. The relatively high quality of Costa Rica’s human capital arid the existencc of an adequate Iechnolngicd platform for telecommunicatmns were the factors that led to the proliferation of call centres, business centres, data centres, software devclopcrh and shared
scrvices for the delivery of back-office functlons, all
under free-zone regimes. These firms seek efficiency through oulsourcing or thc cstahlishment of subsidiaries abroad that can provide high-quality service at lower cost. The most successful operaliuns nf this type in Cmta Rica include Procter & Gamble (P&G), with 28 administrative services (finance, human resmi-ccs, logistics) fur 55,000 P&G employees of 16 subsidiaries in the United States, Canada and Latin America (‘see box 11,7), and Spkes, with a specialized call centre providing technical support and customer service in several different languages and regions. Since 2001 services of t h i s kind have bcen rccciving considerable amounts o f FDI, on the order of US$ 56 million annually (BCCR, 2003).
I
I
he limited. It is expected that, in fuhrc, more advariced P&G
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ECLAC
D. CONCLUSIONS Mention was made, at the end of chapter I of this report, of the gaps that sometimes emerge between host countries’ expectations and the problems associated with the different strategies of TNCs investing in the region. In relation to TNCs that seek efficiency with an eye to capturing third markets, host countries aspire to improve the competitiveness of their manufactures exports, gain access to new technologies, train their human resources, deepen production linkages, boost domestic business development and, in more advanced cases, evolve from an assembly platform into a manufacturing centre. And yet the experiences considered in the region suggest that there are specific problems associated with efficiency-seeking strategies: stagnation at the level of basic assembly, concentration in static rather than dynamic advantages, limited linkages, strong dependence on imported inputs, slow progress towards the formation of production clusters and the crowding out of local businesses. As noted in the introduction to this chapter, two problems arise in relation to TNCs that seek efficiency based on cheap labour: (i) the advantages that initially attract such FDI are not sustainable over time, and (ii) the countries involved risk falling into the low-value-added trap. Consequently, with few exceptions, there is a wide gap between expectations and results in the Caribbean Basin countries, and this implies that the competitiveness achieved by these countries is more illusory than real (see box 11.8). What is most remarkable about the Caribbean Basin’s competitive position is that many countries still cling to outdated arrangements that offer little opportunity to achieve genuine competitiveness. Unlike
the Asian EPZs, many of which were converted into industrial zones and became linked to science and technology parks (ESCAP, 1994), the Central American and Caribbean EPZs often get stuck in a rut. The impact of the transmission mechanisms associated with technology transfer and absorption, the building and deepening of production linkages, human resources training and business development has clearly been more limited than or different from what has generally been assumed in the literature on spillovers (see chapter I). In summary, these countries have succeeded in attracting ISIP nodes of leading United States TNCs seeking to cut production costs in order to compete better with Asian imports in their own market. Unfortunately, these countries have reaped little benefit from this achievement in terms of the industrial and technological upgrading of the activities in question, since the advantages they used to attract TNCs were not sustainable and, instead, caused them to fall into the low-value-added trap. However, these countries do have options for breaking out of the impasse represented by the production sharing mechanism in the apparel industry. Costa Rica, in particular, has shown the way in this regard. The essence of the country’s success is that it was based on the design of a national strategy for developing the production system that involved setting priorities, designing policy tools and establishing appropriate institutions for meeting the primary goals, defining the role of FDI and TNCs within the national strategy and using the technique of targeting a specific kind of FDI and then working to attract the TNCs best suited to the strategy formulated.
Forerqn investmant in Latin Amerlm and the Caribbean, 2003
99
.. .
.
." ~
3ve
a hard
i r operations
Caribbean Basin Countries, some interesting conclusions mutd be
domestrc industrialization process in
country and,
aside
tegral way. They are corn
players in internafional
s, as did
Ing-up of tho
consciously aims at strengthening the
in per capita incom
exports that reprcscnt the tions of domestic firms built on
revenues gwerated by this central export activity that it cannot be said to provide resources lor publicsector tasks such as stlrnulatiflq
have a Caribbean Basin assembly operatinns, an
prornotjng new expurts and
d m a n d from the Vnlted States market
politics that prumated inlegrated
contracts is scvcrcty limited by the
productiuri system. Lastly, instead of giving birth lo domestic companies tha evolve inb global competitors, the bfy model threatens the¡
cess, it inwhrcs th foreign componen
vities were a starti
rnprwrng the economy's s
This page intentionally left blank
101
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
111. INVESTMENT AND BUSINESS STRATEGIES IN THE AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY
A. INTRODUCTION International systems of integrated production (ISIP) designed to increase the efficiency of FDI-based TNCs are bringing about significant changes in the industries that adopt them. Two of the most strongly affected sectors have been the electronics and automotive industries. It may therefore be useful to examine the principal changes that have taken place in the electronics sector, which is the most globalized industry, with a view to predicting how events may unfold in the automotive industry. An analysis of the automotive industry is also of interest because it differs significantly from the apparel industry (see chapter 11). Both these industries are important magnets for FDI in the region. However, automobile production is much more technologically sophisticated and generates greater added value, its supplier networks are more complex and it provides more training for its human resources. Following the recovery of United States manufacturers vis-&vis Asian -and especially Japanesecompanies in the information technology and communications sectors, a new North American model of industrial organization has emerged based on the use of “turnkey” suppliers, that is, large outsourcers with modular production networks (Sturgeon, 2002). According to Sturgeon and Lester (2002):
In the early 1990s, some brand-name electronics firms in the United States moved beyond the tactical use of their contractors as providers of overflow capacity and began to use the most capable of them for more strategic purposes. The advantages included: manufacturing close to end markets or with low-cost labour; subjecting internal operations to market forces; keeping abreast of fast moving assembly technologies; and focusing their own activities on increasingly challenging “core competencies” such as product definition, design, sales and marketing. Today, production outsourcing in electronics has become a widely accepted practice for both large and small brand-name electronics firms based in the United States. More recently, globally-operating lead firms have been in the process of consolidating their contract manufacturing relationships by giving a larger share of their manufacturing to a smaller group of large, technologically-sophisticated contract manufacturers, nearly all of them of American origin. Brand-name electronics firms are increasingly demanding that their contractors have a “global presence” as a way of streamlining the management of their outsourcing relationships. As
102
ECLAC
a result, American contract manufacturers have themselves been aggressively internationalizing since the mid-1990s. (Sturgeon and Lester, 2002). The growth of modular production networks generated two major benefits, principally for United States electronics companies. First, it allowed brandname TNCs to focus on their own competitive advantages, such as product strategy, product research and development, functional design, form design and prototype fabrication, and to allocate other tasks to outsourced manufacturers, such as process research and development, manufacturing design, parts purchasing, production, testing and packaging (see diagram 111.1). Second, it allowed large manufacturers to improve their efficiency through economies of scale based on a reduction in processes and increased us’e of their plants’ installed capacity, which led TNCs that manufacture branded products to lower their prices (see diagram 111.2).
Hence, the overall production chain became more competitive. The large United States outsourcers focused on basic manufacturing processes common to most systems and began to carry out other, more complex activities related to the assembly of complete products. Therefore, an unprecedented transition is being witnessed in the electronics industry as it shifts from in-house production to complete outsourcing (Sturgeon, 2002). In other words, in the electronics industry, competition tends to take place between production chains rather than between individual companies, and success hinges increasingly on the efficiency of the supplier network. Therefore, since the electronics industry is much more globalized than the automotive industry, the question arises as to whether changes in the former presage changes for the latter. Thls chapter examines the changes that have taken place in the automotive industry, especially in the North American market, and its consequences for the principal Latin American sites of this activity: Mexico and Brazil.
B. CHANGES IN THE GLOBAL AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY As indicated in the 1998 edition of Foreign Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, during the twentieth century automobile production played a very important -at times, a decisive- role in the industrialization of many countries. This activity was a pioneer in introducing innovations that later radically transformed the organization of manufacturing processes. In the second half of the twentieth century, the principal innovations in vehicle assembly were systematized in the revolutionary “Toyota Production System” (ECLAC, 1998). Current innovations are in modular assembly. This section will discuss the competitive advantages of these new systems and examine their significance for the automotive industry in Mexico and Brazil. a) Competitive advantages of the Toyota Production System The second most important episode in the automotive industry’s development -after the mobile production line introduced by Ford at the beginning of the last century- originated in Japan, after the Second World War, when Toyota radically redesigned the manufacturing of automobiles and autoparts. E. Toyoda and T. Ohno proposed a different way of organizing vehicle manufacturing, which would later come to be known as the Toyota Production System, or “lean product i on” . Their c on t ri bu t i o n al 1ow e d J ap a n ’s
automotive industry to make extraordinary gains in productivity, improve its quality and consolidate its supplier network, thereby transforming itself into a major competitor in the global market (Womack, Jones and Roos, 1990). This system was based on an integrated concept of the manufacturing process, seen as a medium- and longterm commitment between the automaker and its employees, suppliers and distributors to generate added value all along the production chain. This commitment stressed teamwork and a less hierarchical structure on the assembly line. This collective effort, together with better and more fluid communication among the participants, makes it possible to detect and quickly eliminate potential sources of inefficiencies in all phases of production. It has three core elements: Flexible organization of production. With regard to the workforce, this system entails a multi-task training model so that workers will be able to perform a variety of production, supervision and quality-control tasks. With regard to layout and capital assets, it means that the plant can profitably manufacture small production lots and quickly modify the various characteristics of the final product in response to sudden changes in demand and in order to meet the requirements of differentiated market niches. Production is thus responsive to
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
W
>
h
a
103
ECLAC
104
a
--b
+
a n
K O
K
a
II
II
II
aEm
105
FDreign investment in Latin Amertca and thF! Caribbean 2003
consumerpreferences, uiilikr the Ford sgsterri, which i s based on niass consurriplirm, ~rnposctlon the rnarkct hy the need m incrcase economm o f scale. ‘l’oyota has achieved a truly global production system, through ik:, global chain of automotive body assembly. by which the same line and equipment is used both in small-volume, labour-intcnuive plants and i n IaFer-volume. more automated plants. ‘The emphasis OR ‘%er@ defects”to efiirhialeuwucewary costs. Unli kc Lhc concept of quality control based on detection of e m r s in the final phase of manufactunnp, this system seeks to eliminate nny possibility of rlcfmts, periods of inactivity DT intorvpnons in the use of the installed capacity at the source. Thanks to this concept. the proporuan of defective units has bwn drmiically reduced, arid optmting w s t s have k e n lowered even further. The Toyota system currently represents best practlce in motor vehicle quality.
Better lung-tenlb relations mriong pnduccrs, supplims rlistributors, and an e~lormousreduction in the transaction costs inherent in shon-tenll coinmacia1 idationslips. Such alliarices include, La c x i p l c , multiyear pirrchasing schedules and the distribution of responsibilipfwtlic:desigii of parts, mdels m d m c h d s in urtler to boost quality or cut cmtr. Up fostenng longterm relationships between suppliers and final assemblers: thc systcm has created more room and momentum for the development of suppliers and outsourcing, in CwItrast to the vertical inkgation paacrn of thc h g U n i t e d States automakers. New inventory management methods have also been introduced based on an agreement with the suppliers ta prouidt: input\ and raw matcrials at the right times and m the e ~ pmporbons in which they wouldbe n e d d at eachphase of vehicle production. TIiis irivetllory managcment prachcc k a m e known as just-in-time prmkiction. ant1
T0)rota invested in Brazil (1 959).Thailand
A b r e a m Q! Toyotak sates in
mkhiaties 111Japan and close to 45
cwntrims Starting tn 1959,Toyota bpgan dweluping an inrtial intsmationali7 syategy with a m a l l investmnen! in Srm1 (whtcli cotitinues lu be m a l
maqi8facturingplants in in inacccssible to its axports Thc attempt to establish a
Japan in 1985.Sy 1990 this figure had risen to 14%, by 1995 it had inneascd to ~ 8 . and 3 ~ by ~ m a 2 to 38.2%. ToyDta’s glnhalpmcluction structure m p r i s R s a serles of plafits that are based on variais strategies. first. in -
an mrkct and will
its plant in Amtraila (TMCA in 1997) Third, there are plants with smaller scales of prducfon and enlclancy outside Japan, rriairily in dewl@nIng counlrieu, that cater tD tho local and are based on a local-markt?
Amerka. and Afric 5%, 4% and Fú :, r firm’s internatimal
February 2004,whw6as General Motor’s and Ford’s numbers were below US$ 28 billion)arid in 11sslable and mutually beneficial retatiuns with its principal suppliers (Just-autos.cnm, 2 N d d , and Toyota, 2003). ’
t
ECLAC
106
TOYOTA PRlHClPA
CTS OF ITS INTERNATIONAL
tatcs Corolla, Tacoma tates Ava!on, Camry
Ganada. Puerto Rico
Ta!wan, Canada, Japan, lvllddle East tates Tundra, S q u a i a , Sienna Canada, Oceania
ota Motor Manufacturing si Virginia ~ R u W V($998) ) Try& Mntar Manufacturim Aldbarna hK. (7 MMAL) (2553) T o p ~ bMotor Manufacturing ' Texas (TMMTX) (2006)
Topla Motor Manufacturing Baja California (TMMBC) (2004)
Gamry Solan, Corolla,
Uniied Stateq.
Matriz
Puerto Rica. MBxico
Dyna. Hrace, Opbmo
United Kingdom. Spain, Germany
t 205 5DD
1% O45
310 300 490 591
2 703 t 7 831
186 573
8 o22
218 O18
127 489
United States Uljited States
United Stales
Mcxica lb3 113
dor Caetano 1.M.V.T. (1969)
Portugal
Avensis, Gurulla.
120 636 Europe, Mkldle East
en Automobile
. Aepubtic
prnes Corp. (f.989)
Philippines
New small r a 2#5
Carnry, Corolla, TUV Corolla. Hiace. G a m y
1 O7
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Subtotai Africa
I749 091
Nore
TI
The Toyota systcm was snnn adopted by Other Japancsc companies and then by firms in the Republic of Korea, and it has allow4 them t o reduce costs and adapt their produclim prr~ccssesTO the varying demands of cnnwrners more readily. For four decades, Japanese automakm have increased their rriarkel sham at the expense of the United S ~ c and n Western European fims that had dominated this market. Between 1970 and 1990, this increase was fuelled by expons, which rose [rum 1 . 1 million units in 1970 to 5.8 millirm in 1990: although they subsequcntly fcll tn 4.2 million in 2002. Later on, thankc: to investment in new plants in those markeis, annual output outside of' Japan rose from 3.3 tu 6.7 million units between 1990 and 2002 (Iwami, 20UZ). TwIq, Toyota and Honda are global players, since about half their produclion hkcs place outside of their country of origin, and more than half of tlieh total sales arc matlc I
' rn
abroad- Meanwhile, lhc largc United States (General Molors, Fmd and DaimlerChrysler) and European (Volkswagen, Groupe PSA, Fiat, BhTSV and Renault) nutomakers have hccrmc important players but at the rcginnal level, as attested to by the fact that their sales abroad. as well their production outside llheir rcgicms of origin, do not amounl hi half the total in either case. Heightcncd competition led to a strong concentration in this industry. ?le number of indepeiidetrt vehiclc manufacturers has declined f a i n morc than SO to ahout I O during the last 38 yean, and more than half of global salcs arc now made by the five largest finns. Uiiited Slales and European manufactulers have ~endcrlto purchase existing plants, whcrcas the leading Japanese automakers {Toyeta and Honda) hove preferred l o cxpand intei iiationnlly through investments m new plants, since their production system were superior.' Thc production
t V l m slutmg in [he ICJYUq, domcsric demand in the jayanew markrt sull'ered lhe n~pativccftccra of the financial bubhle, several v l Its automakers w r c dcstabilizcd, and mme of their European arid Aiiieriren compctiiors wked the opprtiinity to acquire ownership or imeasr i k i r huldmgs orthcsc companres' cspital sfock Thic was the case of Kenault [Nissanj, Chrysler (Mitsubishi), Ford {Mardo). and GM (Isuzu, Suzuk! and FHI-Subam}, arnnnfi mhtrs. T h i s did nor a k i lhc leading companies, Toynta and Honda, which ruanuged the Japunese rnarkcr cnsis more succesqfullq
108
ECLAC
system implemented by Toyota and copied by other assembly plants was the main reason for Japanese success (Mortimore, 1997). Outside Japan, this system has had major repercussions, especially in the United States automotive industry. The United States market is the world’s largest, with annual sales-ofsome 17 million vehicles. From 1965 to 2002, the market share of the big three domestic automakers -GM, Ford and Chrysler (now DaimlerChrys1er)- declined from 95% to 61%, while the share held by Japanese manufacturers increased from near zero to 28%. Two-thirds (2.6 million vehicles) of the Japanese automakers’ sales originate in their North American plants (United States Department of Commerce, 2003b). Indeed, Toyota (and Honda) has penetrated deeply into that market.2
b) Modular assembly 1
United States and European transnational automakers have attempted to meet the Japanese challenge in a variety of ways, such as by copying the efficient methods of United States electronics TNCs, i.e., by using modular networks and stepping up specialization and outsourcing. These companies sought to raise the profitability of vehicle design and manufacture by using common platforms that allow for greater coordination and the multiple use of parts, while maintaining the ability to adapt specific vehicle models to local tastes and driving conditions. This strategy -just as in the electronics sectorrequired supplier networks with a global presence and greater coordination of design efforts worldwide. Although modular assembly is still a new trend and is not yet widespread, it has yielded highly positive results in some of the companies that have incorporated it into their production systems. The assembly lines of United States and European automakers’ modular plants now have far fewer functions than they did in the past (see diagram 111.1). The1 production lines are thus better coordinated and more efficient. In these new plants, workers handle modules that have been pre-assembled by outside suppliers; the modules are delivered completely assembled to the receiving area of the final assembly plants, ready to be mounted onto vehicles as they move down the assembly line. Diagram 111.3 depicts the path followed by the basic
*
parts as they move through the modules and are then integrated into the systems. As vehicle manufacturers carry out fewer tasks in the new assembly plants, suppliers must do increasingly more (Fourcade and Midler, 2003). Some estimates suggest that 75% of a vehicle’s value corresponds to just 15 modules, including the suspension; doors; headliners (which may come with grip handles, lights, electrical connections, a sunroof, sun visors and trims already assembled); heating, ventilation and air conditioning units; seats; dashboards; and the drivetrain (that is, the engine, transmission and axles). The tendency to use modules translates into working with systems or groups of modules. At the most advanced modular plants, the leading suppliers are responsible for the part of the vehicle-assembly process at which their respective systems are installed. The trend toward modularization is linked to the consolidation of supplier networks, as the companies that sell raw materials directly to assembly plants buy up the firms that provide the raw materials to them. Because the largest modules are the most difficult and expensive to move, the adoption of the modular assembly process is linked to the establishment of assembly plants next to suppliers’ plants. Hence, parts delivery is synchronized with demand, with modules being delivered according to the sequence of vehicles moving down the assembly line. This creates natural “breakpoints” in the value chain and makes the outsourcing and relocation of module design and production more f e a ~ i b l e The . ~ current trend to create global platforms therefore involves the formation of global supplier bases. Although outsourcing is common throughout the sector, there are significant differences among automakers in terms of the speed, extent, and nature of the shift being made from a vertical structure to a more horizontal one (PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2002). GM and Ford, which were displayed a high degree of vertical integration, have sharply increased their use of outsourcing to reduce costs, and their use of external suppliers by converting their internal subsidiaries into independent companies (Delphi and Visteon, respectively). The recent trend towards globalization in the motor vehicle industry has led to a change in the stratified relationship between producers and their largest suppliers
In recent decades, the Toyota Camry, Honda Accord and Ford Taurus have become the best-selling passenger vehicles in the United States. In February 2003, a top Ford executive explained the success of the Camry by saying, “Frankly, the Camry is currently a better product that the Taurus” (CNNMoney, 2003). Modularization can also be an in-house strategy, however. For example, at Volkswagen, internal subsidiaries have gone from the manufacture of parts to the assembly of modules and systems, which streamlines the assembly line and makes it more efficient.
.
1o9
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Diagram I II .3 FROM PART TO SYSTEM
>
Seat
Headliner Interior panels Trim
>
Interior
Dashboard Gauges Shifter Steering wheel
>
Cockpit module
Fabric Foam Seat frame
Engine control sensors Wiring, spark plugs, distributor Alternator Steering, suspension and trans mision components Wire harness Antilock brakes Audio Lights Heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) Navigation Airbags
SYSTEM
MODULE
PARTS
’
> > >
Interior system
Ignition
Chassis electronics
Electric and Electronic system
Interior electronics
Engines Axles Transmission Suspension (fronthear) Brakes Wheels.and .tires Trim Radiator Fan Lights
>
/
“COrner” moduIes front and rear-end
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), based onTimothy Sturgeon and Richard Lester, “Upgrading East Asian Industries: New Challenges for Local Suppliers”, Cambridge, Massachusetts,Industrial Performance Center, Massachusetts Instituteof Technology (MIT), 18 January 2002, unpublished.
(Graziadio and Zilboricius, 2003). First-tier suppliers are focusing on modular integration; second-tier suppliers, on their production; and third-tier suppliers, on the manufacture of components and the provision of local content in emerging markets (see box 111.2). Modular assembly obliges suppliers to play a much more important role. Assembly plants require their suppliers to invest in and develop products, acquire specialized tools, improve their logistics .and the modules and
systems they produce, and even to provide guarantees to consumers and supervise the second-tier suppliers (Auto Business, 2002; Just-auto.com, 2004a). Most leading suppliers of modular systems and modules are of United States origin. Many first-tier suppliers have responded with a wave of vertical integration (through mergers, acquisitions and joint operation^)^ and geographic expansion in an effort to increase their ability to deliver modular systems and
The increased competition between suppliers will likely lead to a strong trend towards their rationalization, concentration and consolidation, as has occurred in the vehicle assembly industry. It is estimated that, of the 600 to 800 lead suppliers and more than 10,000 secondary suppliers that existed in 2001, from 25 to 100 lead suppliers and from 2,000 to 4,000 secondary suppliers will remain by 2010 (OESA, 2003a).
ECLAC
110
FOR UNDERS PARTS NIANUFACTURiNG
Assembly plants' new prwcuwmont poticies which impv not onty morc outsourcing but also thc trmslcr of activitics to ve hido paits ectOr so quickly that some bask oncepts are losing their meaning. For xarnple, the definruati of lead or
econdary suppliers, OF the
slratjfication of suppliers into tiers deperitlirru 011 wtiurri [hey sell ltreir products to, are coiicepts that are evolving as people attempt to interpret the new state of affairs.A D.5 tier of
supptiers, correspondtrig to suppliers
-
that assembie the systems, has receritly been added tu the traditionat
tlers two through four (more indirect sales and scllcs of progrcssivcly tcss sophisticated inputs). lndccd, a ncw stralrfication of suppliers, covering fhe followiiig categories, is emerging:
( 1 ) Svppllers o! integrated systems: se that otfer assembly plank a broad range of services. They prvduce mcxltilar systems, such as interiors and electric and elsctronic systems. Thetr
s depends on their Pxperienee nd capacity for physical and funct;onal ntcgration, the degree of M c i e n c y of thcir principal modules and
components, instrument?,wire harnesses fnr the electrical system, shmk absorbers, auxiliary motnrs crankshafts, radiatcrs and
tho supplier chain, extensive knowtcdgc of cm$umers and a solid understanding 01 tho vohicle as a unit. (2)lklodulc suppliers thme that offer experience in thc dcsign and manufacture of modules constshng of multiple components with a common functionality, including seats, "corners' and ignitron. brakes and shut-off systems. Their succcss hmgcs on lhcir ability to dcvclop thc functional integration of thcsc rnodulcs and increase the competitiveness of the systems of the most important components, on their full undsrstanding of the consumerk requirements, m their proper handing of their own suppliers and on an adequate undcrstanding of the vehicle as a whole. (3) Co.npanenl suppkrs: those !ha handle parts that perform key functlons and components with a high denaty of techritml kiww-hmv and engineering capacity. They produce, among others
on their opprational efficiency, nomies of scale, the low cast of r inputs, ?heir ability to optimize ts in dcsign, their management of rational comptcxity and chnological innovations and timr enlilication DI value for consumers {4) Suppliers of shndirrdizcd products: tilese are traditional firms producc standardized part, metal par% and conncctms. The maturity of thc producf Icaves little roam for differentiatron Their success depends on their dceration.4 efficiency, emnbmiw of wale, and the cost nf the fa ::tn rs of prodiIctinn . In this new model, thR competitiveness of the compar,Ies in the last group depends primarily On production costs, while those in the first category are more dependen: on innovation md RAD Some auf~parls mmufacturcrs arc thus playing an increasingly important rolc in vcRiclc assembly.
modules on a globd scale (ATKearney, 2003: hoz-Allen tk Warnilton, 1999). The eritry of GM's alid Fold's parts divisions into the vehicle-parts market as Delphi and Visteun created the lugest, most diversitled and geographically farthest-flu ng srippl iers of thc aut4 imr )live industry in one fell swoop. Together with Johnson Controls. Lear, Magna. TRW. Rovch and Siemens Autornotives, ainoiig others, they have become the preferred suppliers of automakers nutsidc Japan. Hence. the growing need to supply automakers with modules on a global qcale is generating a wavc or cnnmlidatiuns arid geographic expansion among fissttier suppliers. In the future. supplicrs, r a h e r !han producen, may undertake most of the flows of FDI in the sector.
Thih appcms L o bc a case in which the siinilarity in t h e changes m the electronics and automotive industnn is mure apparent thaii real. The Toyota system has maintained its technological leademhip in thc aulomotivc sector, despite the changes introduced by United States and European TNCs. Neither IJnited Sratcs initiativch i n modular assembly nor those of European companies have derailed the Japanese supplier nctworks, unlike what occurred in the electronics industry, especially in information and commrinirations kchne~logics.\Ve need to ask why this is. Toyola reprcsentativcs have indicated that the company's strength sterns from the strength of its
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
111
suppliers (EIU/McKinsey & Co., 1999) and that Toyota is so clearly the leader of the sector that it has become the frame of reference for best practices (OESA, 2003b). Toyota currently has a world-class supplier network both in the United States and in Japan. The Toyota system depends on its human resources management policy, which stimulates employee creativity and loyalty, but also, and very importantly, on the high efficiency of the components-and-parts supplier network (Financial Times, 2002). Moreover, modular assembly in the automotive industry does not appear to have the same effects as it has in the electronics industry. Traditional sourcing methods are still common at companies such as GM and Ford, which have globally centralized organizations and short-term relationships with their suppliers that have caused conflicts. There has been some experimentation with the use of short lists of suppliers and with their participation prior to project authorization, which consists in asking suppliers to bid on the modules and parts that they would like to design and produce. However, the tendency to focus exclusively on cutting costs, including procurement costs, is still very strong. Some United States assembly plants are, then, endangering the future quality and the long-term commitment of their supplier networks by requiring disproportionate short-term cost reductions (Auto Business, 2002). This leads to tension within the assembly plant itself between its purchasing division, which pushes for lower prices, and the manufacturing division, which attempts to favour modularization, local content and physical proximity between the company’s plants and those of its suppliers. The performance of J.I. López as Vice President of the Purchasing Division of General Motors opened up a wide rift between the United States assembly plants and their suppliers in the midst of a crisis situation (Leuliette,
2003).5 The shortcomings of the United States “purchase price” model were seen in excess production capacity, meagre profits, the additional, non-remunerated responsibilities that were transferred to suppliers, United States assembly plants’ strong dependence on suppliers in that country, and limited cooperation between the two groups of companies (OESA, 2003b).6 Moreover, United States plants have been unable to overcome the problem posed by their more limited flexibility vis-&vis their Japanese competitors (Just-auto.com, 2003c, 2003d). Complaints of harsh treatment have also come from Europe, where Ford has been accused by its suppliers of being interested only in short-term cost-cutting without respecting their intellectual property rights or rewarding their efforts to improve quality, innovate or suggest ways to lower costs, which increases their risks. Ford is also criticized for unnecessary confrontations and for resorting to unacceptable tactics (Just-auto.com, 2004d). From this perspective, it is clear that United States (and European) companies have not matched the advantages of the Toyota system, despite their efforts to introduce modular assembly processes and other practices (Sako, 2003). United States automakers have only succeeded in partially and superficially replicating the benefits of Toyota’s system, as evidenced by their financial statements and market capitali~ation.~ To understand the nature of this chain of events, the fundamental differences between Japanese and United States supplier networks must be taken into account. The starkest differences have to do with their function, structure and the incentives system. The supplier network is more important for Japanese automakers, which produce less than 40% of their parts, than it is for United States firms, where this proportion is 60% or more (Tsuji, 2003). In addition, Japanese supplier networks have a broader structure, which includes four or more tiers of
In April 1992, J.I. López took over as General Motors Vice President for Purchasing worldwide and became famous for his harsh treatment of suppliers in his drive to establish a new system for defining vehicle-part prices based on the vehicle’s total expected value. He opened up existing contracts to bids, ceased to give preference to GM-owned suppliers and demanded a 50% productivity increase. His emphasis on cutting short-term costs damaged the long-term relationship with suppliers (Moffett and Youngdahl, 1998; Fortune, 1997). J.I. López, during his time with Volkswagen, also played a decisive role as the person responsible for the installation of the first modular plant in Resende, Brazil, in 1996. The largest vehicle parts manufacturer, Delphi, has expressed its preference for doing business with Japanese assembly plants because of the treatment it receives from United States automakers (Just-auto.com, 2 0 0 3 ~ )Delphi . gauges its progress in terms of the increasing share of its business not carried out with its former parent company, General Motors (PPT, “Delphi”, 10-11 November 2003). Delphi’s revenues from activities unrelated to General Motors rose from 18% to 39% between 1997 and September 2003. Furthermore, over half these sales were to customers outside North America (Delphi, 2003). Delphi is now the largest foreign autoparts supplier in China (Just-auto.com, 2004b). For example, GM’s and Ford’s market capitalization, taken together, is equivalent to half of Toyota’s. Moreover, in 2003, Ford came close to bankruptcy (The Economist, 2003a and 2003b; America Economy, 2003c) and General Motors posted uncovered financial liabilities in connection with the pensions of former workers on the order of US$ 20 billion, which approached its value on the stock exchange at the end of that year (Yahoo.finance, 2003).
112
ECLAC
suppliers, and are less vertically integrated, as they are composed of a smaller number of large suppliers possessing more specialized engineering capacity. Hence, the small number of direct suppliers simplifies procurement, at both the firm level and the plant level, for Japanese assembly plants. The interdependence among the elements of the supplier base is predicated on the idea that some of the same directors sit on the various boards or the existence of minority shareholdings in these companies, is linked to significant intrafirm trade within their group or keiretsu, and is not based exclusively on market relations. This promotes cooperation, especially with regard to the sharing of technical information, in the context of the automaker’s integral support for the parts manufacturer.8 These relations influence the incentives system, given that belonging to a group with long-term contracts and relatively certain profit margins has translated into exemplary performance by the overall organization. Guaranteed profit margins were reduced over time to encourage improvements in productivity and quality, as well as safety. Toyota encourages its lead suppliers to invest in specialized equipment and to train its human resources, which in the long run benefits both companies. The first-tier supplier, in turn, has similar relations with the second-tier suppliers, and so on, and this is positively reflected in design, productivity and price, all along the chain. By contrast, the traditional system in the United States for parts purchasing is based on short-term contracts with multiple suppliers, which compete to maintain their position. This is a rather conflictive relationship, based on continual demands for price cuts and the use of competitive bidding. Hence, the automaker reaps the benefits of productivity improvements, while the supplier assumes the cost. This asymmetry diminishes the supplier’s incentives to raise its productivity and strains the relationship between both firms (EIU/ McIOnsey & Co., 1999). The differences between the Toyota system and the system used by United States automakers is also reflected in the financial positions of their principal suppliers (e.g., Denso, in the case of Toyota, andvisteon, in the case of Ford) (Just-auto.com, 2004d and 2004~). Toyota’s gains in the United States market demonstrate not only this firm’s strength but also the significance of the challenge it poses for its competitors. In North America, Toyota has constructed a base of 500 suppliers to support its local production operations (1.2
million vehicles in 2002) in assembly plants in Alabama, Kentucky, West Virginia and California, in the United States, and in Ontario, in Canada. Annual purchases of inputs exceed US$ 20 billion. Moreover, Toyota has succeeded in raising its competitiveness by using common parts in numerous models, upgrading and integrating the design process, increasing output and simplifying logistics. As a result, Toyota has lowered the cost of its vehicles by 16% since 1997, winning many awards for quality, delivery time and initiatives to support its suppliers. Teruyuki Minoura, Senior Managing Director and Chief Officer of the Business Development Group and of the Purchasing Group (and former Managing Director of Global Purchasing), captures the essence of Toyota’s guiding principles in the advice he gives his suppliers: “You are going to have to start analyzing the needs and wants of the end user. You’re going to be finding out what end users want and working to develop suitable components. Then you’re going to be offering what you’ve developed to carmakers like us, who are going to incorporate these components into our designs. That’s the kind of shape that the industry is going to take. When that happens, terms like carmakers and suppliers will become inappropriate. The two will have come together as partners, and together develop high-quality, low-cost products that meet the needs of the end users. To survive, you are going to need to use knowledge you gain on the shop floor to trim costs, and to funnel the funds from those cost savings into development. You need to put extra effort into knowing yourselves and knowing your competitors. You need to build structures that allow you to know your own strengths and benchmark them against those of your competitors.” (Toyota, 2003, p. 4) The modular assembly initiative in the automotive industry has not had the same effects as it has had in the electronics industry. United States automakers are attempting to use this initiative to obtain advantages similar to those afforded by the Toyota system; however, a core element of Toyota’s success is still missing: the construction of long-lasting relationships with the component companies in their system as a means of achieving stable, long-term, mutually beneficial growth (Gritton, 2003). This conclusion is important for Latin America’s automotive industry. ~
*
~~~
Like other vehicle producers, Toyota has asked its parts suppliers for large cost reductions (of 30%, according to its competitiveness-andcost-reduction program for 2001). The difference is that, to the extent possible, Toyota selects and cooperates actively with its keiretsu suppliers to increase their competitiveness as tier-0.5 and first-tier systems suppliers (Ikeda and Nakagawa, 2001).
113
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
C. COMPETITIVENESS IN BRAZIL‘S AND MEXICO’S AUTOMOTIVE SECTORS Latin America’s automotive industry has gone through three stages of development, dictated, in varying degrees, by firms’ strategies and the national development policies promoted by each national Government (ECLAC, 1998 chapter IV). In the first stage, which lasted through the 1950s, automotiveplants assembled inputs imported from developed countries and produced vehicles with little differentiation from those made in the firms’ home countries. At the same time, the affiliates in the region had few links with the local economies, since practically all inputs were imported. The impetus given to many productive activities under the import-substitution industrialization (ISI) model allowed the automotive industry to enter a second phase of development, which lasted until the early 1980s (ECLAC, 1987). Market-seeking FDI by TNCs in the sector was essential for industrial development.This stage was characterized by trade and industrial policies designed to encourage the establishment of automotive plants in the region and to ensure that vehicles, which were intended primarily for the domestic market, had a high degree of local content. The sector went from assembly plants that functioned as isolated enclaves to plants having strong linkages with the local economy, thanks to the -at times onerous- local content requirements and barriers to automobile and autoparts imports. Although this arrangement allowed for a significant degree of industrialization in several countries of the region, it eventually led to a clear technological gap vis-&-visthe modern automotive plants in developed countries and to diminishing international competitiveness. This context of deterioration of the region’s industry marked the beginning of the third stage in the evolution of the automotive sector in Latin America, which is still underway. This period has witnessed an important opening of regional economies, with FDI once again playing an essential role. In MERCOSUR, and specifically in Brazil, the search for local markets gave way to a search for regional ones, whereas in Mexico, it led to a search for efficiency through the establishment of export platforms. In the remaining countries the industry was reduced to a minimum or even disappeared. As a result of their different approaches, Mexico’s and Brazil’s industries evolved differently, as seen in the international competitiveness of the two countries. Latin America’s automotive industry is moderately important, accounting for 7.6% of world output in 2001.
This sector accounted for 32.9%’ 29.9% and 10.5%, respectively, of the sales of the 100 largest subsidiaries of TNCs, of the 100 largest manufacturing firms and of the 500 largest companies of the region in 2002, and for 21.8% of the exports by the region’s 200 largest exporters. Nonetheless, competitiveness in Mexico and Brazil -where the bulk of the industry in the region is locateddiffers significantly. In addition, Mexico’s share of the sales of the 100 largest subsidiaries of TNCs, of the 100 largest manufacturing firms and of the 500 largest firms in Latin America has increased from 18.9%, 21% and 7%, respectively, in 1999 to 26.5%, 25% and 8.5% in 2002, and Brazil’s share has declined from 7.7%, 7% and 2.3% in 1999 to 5.6%, 5% and 1.7% in 2002, whereas in both countries the share of the exports of the region’s 200 largest exporters fell -from 23% to 19.5% in Mexico, and from 2.3% to 1.8% in Brazil. In other words, Latin America’s automotive industry has changed drastically. These changes have been promoted -as part of new domestic policies- primarily by the revised business strategies of transnational automakers that privilege the search for efficiency over the search for markets in order to establish, using FDI, international or regional production systems. From 1985 to 2001, Mexico’s share of total world imports increased from 1.58% to 2.81%, and its goods exports, once mainly natural resources and manufactures based on those resources (63.7% in 1985), were dominated by non-resource-based manufactures (78.3% in 2001), mainly medium-technology exports (17.9% in 1985 and 38.1% in 2001), with automotive-industry products being particularly prominent (see table 111.1). The leading ten products in 2001 -representing half the value of goods exports- include passenger vehicles (1 1.2%), vehicles for the transport of goods (3.8%) and autoparts (3.4%), which, in 2001, accounted for 18.4% of the value of Mexico’s exports. In 1985, these three items’ share of total exports was merely 3.9%, slightly more than one-fifth the 2001 level, with the most important item being autoparts (2.5%). The country’s share of total world imports of passenger vehicles increased from close to zero in 1985 to more than 6% in 2001, and autoparts imports rose from less than 2% to 4%, while in the United States market Mexico’s share of vehicles increased from nearly zero to close to 14%, and autoparts grew from 3% to more than 11% the same period. The automotive industry was, therefore, one of
114
ECLAC
Table 111.1 MEXICO: SHARE OF WORLD IMPORTS AND EXPORT STRUCTURE, 1985-2001 (Percentages) 1985
I. Market share
1.58
II. Export structure Natural resourcesa Natural-resource-based manufacturesb Non-resource-based manufacturesC - Low technologyd - Medium technologye - High technologyf Othersg 111.10 Leading exports by relative shares 781 Passenger automobiles 333 Crude petroleum oils 764 Telecom equipment and parts and accessories 752 Automatic data-processing machines and units thereof 782 Motor vehicles for the transport of goods 931 Special transactions and unclassified commodities 773 Equipment for distributing electricity 784 Motor vehicle parts and accessories 761 Television receivers 772 Electrical apparatus for switching or protecting electrical circuits
h
i
*
+
*
+
*
+
*
+
+ *
+
*
+
* *
+
+
1990 1.30
1995
1999
2001
1.75
2.56
2.81
100.0 54.8 8.9 33.6 5.8 17.9 9.9 2.6
100.0 30.7 8.1 57.1 10.5 31.7 14.9 3.9
100.0 16.9 6.6 72.7 13.6 39.8 19.4 3.6
100.0 12.2 5.4 78.4 15.1 38.4 24.9 3.9
100.0 12.6 5.1 78.3 14.0 38.1 26.2 3.9
55.6 0.8 41.8 3.3 0.2 0.6 2.1 2.3 2.5 0.5 1.5
47.1 5.8 19.3 3.0 1.7 0.6 3.4 4.3 4.1 2.4 2.5
45.5 9.6 9.2 3.7 2.4 2.8 3.2 4.8 3.8 3.5 2.5
48.1 10.2 7.2 5.3 4.5 3.3 3.6 4.3 3.5 3.7 2.5
51.8 11.2 8.2 6.5 5.5 3.8 3.7 3.7 3.4 3.3 2.5
Source:Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of the TradeCAN software, 2002 Edition. Product groups a
e
i
based on the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC), Rev. 2. Contains 45 simply processed commodities, including concentrates. Contains 65 elements: 35 agricuIturaI/forestry groups and 30 others (mainly metals -except iron and steel- petroleum products, cement, glass, etc.). Contains 120 groups representing the sum of d + e + f. Contains 44 elements: 20 groups from the textiles and clothing division plus 24 others classified as paper products, glass and steel, jewellery. Contains 58 elements: 5 from the automotive industry, 22 from the processing industry and 31 from the engineering industry. Contains 18 elements: 11 groups from the electronics division plus 7 from pharmaceutical products, turbines, aircraft, instruments. Contains 9 groups of items not elsewhere classified (mostly from section 9). Corresponds (*) to t h e 50 fastest-growing groups in world imports from 1985 to 2001. Groups in which Mexico gained (+) or lost (-) market share of world imports from 1985 to 2001.
the main determinants of the Mexican economy’s improved international competitiveness from 1985 to 2001. By contrast, Brazil’s share of world imports fell from 1.38% to 0.98% during the same period. The make-up of export goods from that country changed only slightly, as the share corresponding to natural resources and naturalresource-based manufactures (63.3% in 1985) decreased, and that of non-resource-based manufactures rose (45.2% in 2001) (see table 111.2).The ten most important products -accounting for more than one-third of the value of goods exports- include passenger vehicles (3.2%), whose share has more than doubled since 1985, when this item represented 1.3% of Brazil’stotal exports. Nonetheless,most exports were natural resources or natural-resource-based manufactures. The share of world imports of passenger vehcles from Brazil increased from close to 0.37% in 1985 to 0.62% in 2001, and that of autoparts, from 0.96% to 1.03%.In the Latin American market -where Brazil placed
most of its automotive exports-its share of vehicle imports fell from 15.90% to 10.91%, and that of autoparts, from 6.57% to 4.03% during the same period. Moreover, total exports of the different categories of vehicles in the automotive sector (passenger vehicles, autoparts, trucks, engines and road vehicles), which represented 14.4% of Brazil’s total exports to Latin America in 1985,rose to 2 1.1% in 2001. Nevertheless, the market share of exports from Brazil to Latin America decreased from 4.3 1% in 1985 to a 3.6% in 2001 (see table 111.3).This shows that the automotive industry was not one the main determinants of the international competitiveness of the Brazilian economy, neither globally nor in the Latin American market.
a) Performance of the automotive industry in Brazil and Mexico Mexico’s and Brazil’s automotive industries followed a similar pattern until the 1980s. Under the
115
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Table 111.2 BRAZIL: SHARE OF WORLD IMPORTS AND EXPORT STRUCTURE, 1985-2001 (Percentages) 1985 1.38
I. Market share
II. Export structure Natural resourcesa Natural-resource-based manufacturesb Non-resource-based manufacturesC - Low technologyd - Medium technologye - High technology‘ Oth ersg 111.10 Leading exports by relative shares 281 Iron ore and concentrates 222 Oil-seeds and oleaginous fruits, whole or broken, soft 792 Aircraft and associated equipment and parts thereof 081 Feeding stuff for animals (not including unmilled cereals) 781 Passenger automobiles 251 Pulp and waste paper 851 Footwear 071 Coffee and coffee substitutes O 1 1 Meat and edible meat offal, fresh, chilled or frozen 058 Fruit, preserved, and fruit preparations ~~
h
I
+ + *
+
*
+
+ +
1990 1.10
1995 1.o1
1999 0.95
2001 0.98
100.0 31.7 31.6 35.8 13.5 19.3 2.9 0.9
100.0 26.1 29.3 43.6 15.0 24.8 3.8 1.o
100.0 25.3 30.4 42.6 14.1 25.1 393 1.5
100.0 22.8 29.8 45.1 11.7 25.3 8.1 2.1
100.0 23.1 29.2 45.2 11.7 23.3 10.1 2.4
43.0 8.5 2.2 0.2 6.1 1.3 1.5 4.4 12.3 1.8 4.7
38.1 9.0 2.9 1.3 5.5 1.6 2.0 4.3 5.5 1.8 4.2
33.9 7.5 2.7 0.4 5.5 1.1 2.8 3.5 5.0 2.2 3.2
36.9 792 3.9 3.5 3.4 2.7 3.0 3.0 4.4 2.5 3.3
37.2 6.9 4.8 4.4 3.7 3.2 3.1 3.0 2.9 2.6 2.6
~
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of the TradeCAN software, 2002 Edition. Product groups based on the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC), Rev. 2. a Contains 45 simply processed commodities, including concentrates. Contains 65 elements: 35 agricultural/forestry groups and 30 others (mainly metals -except iron and steel- petroleum products, cement, glass, etc.). Contains 120 groups representing the sum of d + e + f. Contains 44 elements: 20 groups from the textiles and clothing division plus 24 others classified as paper products, glass and steel, jewellery. e Contains 58 elements: 5 from the automotive industry, 22 from the processing industry and 31 from the engineering industry. Contains 18 elements: 11 groups from the electronics division plus 7 from pharmaceutical products, turbines, aircraft, instruments. Contains 9 groups of items not elsewhere classified (mostly from section 9). Correspond (*) to the 50 fastest growing groups in world imports from 1985 to 2001. ’ Groups in which Brazil gained (+) or lost (-) market share of world imports from 1985 to 2001.
’
import-substitution industrialization model, the sector was strongly regulated by State policies that provided incentives for local production, as part of a protection system, both tariff- and non-tariff-based,that also covered important performance and other requirements, including minimum local-content requirements. Production was principally intended for the domestic market. This began to change in the 1980s in Mexico and in 1990 in Brazil, when the new public policies focused on bringing about greater integration with the international economy. In Mexico, attracting FDI was made a priority, in keeping with the autoinakers’ strategy. In this context, the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) proved pivotal; this was an “investment-driven” integration model, with the gradual elimination, during a transition period, of existing restrictions and the adoption of rules of regional origin. Thus, Mexico went from an actively ivlterventionist policy in the automotive industry to a much more passive one,
in which the business strategy of seeking efficiency to establish an export platform has had a decisive impact. The country’s production structure was profoundly transformed, and the country became an important export platform, especially to its NAFTA partners, the United States and Canada (see box 111.3). Brazil’s evolution has contrasted strongly with Mexico’s, since both countries rescinded their importsubstitution policies (see box 111.4). Brazil privileged its automotive industry through MERCOSUR, a “policydriven” integration model, and through national incentive policies to promote “popular” (economy) automobiles and FDI. At the MERCOSUR level, the main policy tools were tariff protection and foreign-trade compensation or equilibrium among MERCOSUR members. This facilitated the integration of operations of companies established in Brazil and Argentina. The most important domestic tools were the incentives programmes for FDI, at the federal and state levels (see box 111.5). Despite the
116
ECLAC
Table 111.3 BRAZIL: SHARE OF LATIN AMERICAN IMPORTS AND EXPORT STRUCTURE, 1985-2001 ( Percentages)
I. Market share II. Export structure Natural resourcesa Natural-resource-based manufacturesb Non-resource-based manufacturesC - Low technologyd - Medium technologye - High technologyf Othersg 111.1 O Leading exports by relative shares 781 Passenger automobiles 784 Motor vehicle parts and accessories 641 Paper and cardboard 764 Telecom equipment and parts and accessories 782 Motor vehicles for the transport,of goods 583 Polymerization and copolymerization products 713 Internal combustion piston engines, and parts thereof 625 Rubber tyres, inner tubes, etc 783 Road vehicles 281 Iron ore and concentrates
I
+ + + + +
1985
1990
4.31
3.90
1995
1999
4.32
100.0 9.2 26.2 64.3 11.1 45.3 7.9 0.2
100.0 5.9 23.2 69.7 14.1 47.8 7.8 1.I
100.0 6.7 21.4 70.5 17.1 47.2 6.2 1.2
27.5 7.0 3.1 2.8 1.2 1.6 3.9 1.2 1.2 1.4 4.1
29.6 4.8 4.2 3.4 1.2 3.2 3.2 1.6 1.8 2.4 3.8
30.7 3.8 7.0 3.8 0.3 3.5 3.0 2.6 1.7 2.8 2.2
’
3.77
2001 3.60
100.0 7.3 19.8 72.3 15.8 46.0 10.6 0.4
100.0 8.3 19.7 71.3 16.1 43.9 11.3 0.4
35.2 7.4 5.3 3.7 2.8 4.6 2.7 2.4 1.7 2.4 2.2
35.0 8.8 4.7 3.7 3.6 3.3 2.8 2.4 1.9 1.9 1.9
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of the TradeCAN software, 2002 Edition. Product groups . based on the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC), Rev. 2. Contains 45 simply processed commodities, including concentrates. Contains 65 elements: 35 agricuIturaVforestry groups and 30 others (mainly metals -except iron and steel- petroleum products, cement, glass, etc.). Contains 120 groups representing the sum of d + e + f. Contains 44 elements: 20 groups from the textiles and clothing division plus 24 others classified as paper products, glass and steel, jewellery. Contains 58 elements: 5 from the automotive industry, 22 from the processing industry and 31 from the engineering industry. Contains 18 elements: 11 groups from the electronics division plus 7 from pharmaceutical products, turbines, aircraft, instruments. Contains 9 groups of items not elsewhere classified (mostly from section 9). Correspond (*) to the 50 fastest growing groups in Latin American imports from 1985 to 2001. Groups in which Brazil has won (+) or lost (-) market share of Latin American imports from 1985 to 2001.
attempt to raise the international competitiveness of Brazilian industry through regional-market- and, to a lesser extent, efficiency-seeking strategies, the economic difficulties of MERCOSUR’s principal members made it necessary to redefine policies so as to rekindle domestic demand, which, in turn, affected these countries’ external accounts. The differences between Mexico’s and Brazil’s automotive sectors are well known. Investment in the automotive and autoparts industry in Mexico focused on the search for efficiency, to cater to the demanding North American market. In Brazil, although investment flowed into the country principally in search of regional markets, it has been saddled by crises, both domestic and in the other MERCOSUR countries, reflected in successive policy changes; nonetheless, part of the investment in some assembly plants also sought efficiency (Mortimore, 1998a and 1998b).
In the 1990s, FDI gave a strong impetus to Mexico’s and Brazil’s automotive industries. From 1997 to 2000, FDI in Mexico totalled US $1 1.3 billion, as the country became an important link for the ISIP of transnational automakers from the United States. Mexico’s vehicle-parts industry had already been transnationalized, principally through of the purchase of Mexican companies by North America ones; hence, in this period, new FDI in this sector mostly targeted new plants. By contrast, in Brazil, FDI rose to US$ 3 1.2 billion (US$ 18.3 billion in assembly plants and the rest in parts manufacturing) between 1990 and 2001. Similarly, from 1994 to 2002, the vehicle-parts industry became transnationalized: foreign companies’ share of capital stock, sales and investment in the sector’s domestic industry rose from 48.1 %, 47.6% and 48% to 78.4%, 75.6% and 85.9%’ respectively (SINDIPECAS, 2003).
Foreign investment in Latin America and ths Caribbean. 2003
177
and Ihe progressive
[puts from into these models I
s pdicy was tafsr les for lhe. dumestic _ ._ _ rcrn'ained in force, from 1962 to 1% the country went from active, , interverrtionist policies -that is, the promotion of industrial-import
Arnenca'
or1 the balanced
:d to
to this subregicmal market and allows for the spectali;zatron of vehicle assemblers anrf Darts manufactu
I
with nffilintoc ir
an a minimum Iwel of domestic content (60%),a balanced foreign-exchange assembt budge: for each firm, vehlcte assembl plants' obligation to export vehicle parts, and a maximum levet of fo equity (43%) in autnparfs flrms {rl María y Campos, 199 1 1 In responss t~ the industry's
At the SB (for the t in 1994 t remainec
force in la94 and 2( Under NAFTA, tariff 9 9% in t 894 to Fen
lthough ), and content
of origin in e Iransttion Ir0 poltcies in th
appropriate pnlicles.The 1993 and
open emnumy, Mexico succeeded i performance rquirernents were
compensation. by frrm. dec
The politic:, implcmcntcrl to promote the industry in Mexico and Itram1 permitted explosive growth In the sector starting in the 1990s. e w i though compleldy different a p p a c h w wcn: u s d in each country. Retween I990 and 2003, automotive production m both countries grew at an aiwage yearly rate above 5%, translaling iriko Ihe ricar doubling nf omput in this period (see table 111.4}. The difference in the focus of the policies i s reflected in thc iwri countries' automotive-sector trade strmwres. In Mexico, which became an export plnlforrri u n d e r NAFTA, cxpcirtq increased nearly fivefold between 1990 and 2002, with annuaI growth averaging 13.9%. I n the sarnc pcriod, the sector's export
y
The yrwpznsiiy tu ~
X ~ D IF K cqual EO thc
orientation was strengthened, since, in addition to
the
increase io myorts? the prrrpcnsity tci cxport m t m than dr~uhlcd,from 34.4% to 74.7%. surging especially i n 1995, when the crisis besetting the country led to declining oulput arid an incrcasc in pmduction for cxport? Moreover, imports also saw sharp growth in the same period: in 1930 only 1 O or salch i n Mcxicn u'crc imported vehicles, compared with 55'5 in 2002. This increase sterns from the distinctly export-riricntcrl naturc of Mexico's automotive industry, whose plants have been designed for this purposc and which arc Icss arid Icss important for domestic consumption (see table 111.4).
share of domestic output
118
ECLAC
B HANGING POLtClES IN BAAZtCS AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY
Stnce the 1B6Os, the a
VR
industry has b w n a prhrity of Brazilian public policy Government acfinns w o w
adontinu domestic-content-
'~
requirements Domestic production, intended prlmarity lor the domestic market, grew quickly and steadily. E R ~ ~ 1959 B B and ~ 1974,annual outp ultlplled nearly tsnfold, accounting for r 5D% of Latin Amsrican productton. these years, transnationaf akers saw Drazil as a market great deal of potential that ad most of the [mal production uired new investments. In the mtd-l970s, mihatives aimed at improving the automotive industry's inlegmiion into world markets were introduced. lo LjWdFanke that part of pmductiurr would be exported, a poticy kTlU\VIl ¿IS FdaX Benefits TO
Special Export Programmes [Benelícios Fiscais a Programas Especiais de ExportacBo, BEFIEX was created. At the swiit! Irme, intsgration af nroductm with Arcpntina began to bs valued. Companies with opsrations in both countries began to trade finished products, especially parts and components. In the SECQKI half D e gOOs, a series ol steps was taken tu reriytheri ecunvmic integration etweeii Argentrna and Brazil. In the uiomcltive sector, Protocol N' 21 as cstabltshed. intended to reater integration hetmen t untries' automotive imkz?ries. Th tialive was well recelwd hy final-
assembly mmpanhs, particularly Ford and Volkswagen, which joint venturp (Au!olatinaj, there'o irnptarnmtlng a strategy of p raziI
egration was seen as a t m l for tradn and frnanciat opening and for fostering dorncstic economic stability more ttlan for promoling dcvcloprncnt This new urteritaliwi was ratified with thhc creation of MERCOSUR. A5 par! of fhi r&mat mitiative, agreement was
reached on a common exte and a zero britt among niernber countries b r automotive trade, and
With the ado eclat rules, rhe tug of war among Brazilian Sttltes tu etlrdc! lurergn inveslments
bare prohibited, startirq t January 2000. These policy agreements rnwed up the deadlines far TNCs to restructure their pruduclwn, with a view to competing urider the riew economic opening. Huwewr, Argerilina's and
created a new conflict within MERCOSUR. tn {ate AprrI 1997, a r:ew agreemenl or) tIie number of vehicles tmt could be irnportcd by Brazil was eslablished. Hence, final-assembly
Brazdb ecDnorntc dill,cullies changed priorities and exacerbated probtems between the M Q countries in Ihe auturnslive sector. Brazil wet! eyain locused its priorities un !lie domestic market. Tax breaks for export programmes were eliminated, and in 1995 a programme providing incentives for 1Re production of law-cmt vchiclcs was established to rekindle domcstic demand.This programme rcduccd tax rstes on industrialized products for automobiles with engines up TO 1.000 cc as well as on the tmportation of ~d-ticleparts for that category. Vchiclc import quotas were established; fhe corresponding ltlrtlts were iiicreased to 70%; and import quotas were reduced to 2 8% for parts and componen?s and to 2 0% for maclines and equtpment.The automow industry '.vas thc only industrial sector to h a w a b m d sct of ixccrtive policies after the econnmir. opsr;ing jiPEA, 1998b). Although these memires did rekindle domestic , !hey began to genernte trade-balance prublerns. En late 1996, the Federal overnment estctblistier! specia! rules creating additional incentives for finally comoanies thal set up operations in [he north, notrheast a nt:al regions of the countrg: recetve the benefits of this ternpora programme, autorirakers were requi to establish operations before 31 M 1397;however, In early July 199Y, 4 ate exfsnded the deadltne to the af that year. This step WBY laker) !a w Ford Motor Co.to set up a new plant in the State nf Bahia. incentives Id be sxtendRd until 31 December 2010 (IPEA, 1997, a d lPFA, lags).
Source Economic Commission for Lath Amerlca and the Caribbean (ECCAG).
companies established in Argentina ancl not benefiting f:on theso r t h because they did no! have manufacturing operations in Brazil woro incorporatcd into thc quota system As the doadltnc for csZ+blishing c~rnrnanrules fo: thc automotivc indust:y in MERCDSUR approached,the discrepancies in member countriesobjccttves became etear in late 1988 negotiations resumed, and an aqreemenf was :each& on tho implenrtntaticn of a MERGOSUR aularnoilve pllcy sRttlng forth a bmsi!icm pefi3d for tras trade within the group. a common Rxtemal twff (35% for vehicles, buses and trucks) and 60% minlmun mginrml content In mid-2000, Argentina and 3r,uit approvcd this policy, which regulates trade in fhe hector hotween the two countrw during !he tran45on per¡&, from 2000 to X105 The new rtiles attempt to maintain a mgtilatted-trade rncchmsm -hased on t h e prmltid:ve sphciallratinnof assembly plants ard the assignrnmt Di models tu each country, to increase the scale oí prdwhor: and raise campet tiveness- to defiiie a minimum domcshc mritcnt and io a tetting nrn Brazilian subsidies distort investment flows. Ncncthefess, !he ag:ocmcnt was signifimntly modiflad two years later, in 3u!y X37,anid Argcntrna's acute linancial crisifi Rcg'onat content was set ;rt 6 W the common cxternal tariff at 35% and the trade-balancc policy was made more flcxrblo. Morewer. it was decid& that all domelccclntent rcqu%remerrts must: be elm nated by 1 January 2006,wi!h whi the free-trade arca will fully enter into loroe. This new stage slwuld favour Brazil, in Iightuf ilu large market and greater etfciency of its inawlactwin plants.
119
Foreign Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
ncentives have always been used
o General Motors tcl burld a
hy governments -al the municipal,
they becarrie curnrnm, causing an aulheritiv "tax wat" jn the muntry, with widespread disputes to attract new
the capi?al investsd by t h ~ million reais. In ths caw o benz's facilities in Juir de Gerais, the incentIves years, total 640 7 mllli InvwAmerlts. 695 mill¡ Renault's factory in Jose dos Pinhais, Paran& is the amount of th
lost control of lhs process and the respeclive negoiiaituriu, ahiuti carne be handled by the State governments.
given over t O years, 18s than the inifial cspltai (one hlllion reais). Thfi majority of these bcncfiis
cuts, exenipli~nsand defe
O biltio;l reais that the ive sector planned to r etween 1995 and 2002. he fjscat benefits require an te disbursement by [t>e enl, whsreBy Uie tax benefits not rwesswrrly mean payouls: her, the government wilt cease to the new investment was made, At the end of the subsidy perrod, firrnv will begin to pay riorrn~l Zaxes, and State
additior, disburscrncnts of State budget rcsourccs to give land to
infrastructure for the factorres The lard subsidles, whose value was c;lculated based or1 the land's
arrival ot these companies However, !o: the country as a vihnle, the results
effect on cash,qtrapped State bud local economies and, in the end, t country (De Silva Alves, 2007).
the State of Riu Gmride do Sur
factors. including parent cornpames'
was calculated on tRA basis of an to cvmoanies able to obtain lrnancin
plants to thoir States were almost equimlcnt to the tnitial irives!merit made by the companies (De Silva
reglons' dewlaprnent. nc: the Caribbean (ECLAC)
120
ECLAC
Figure Ill 2 MEXICO AND BRAZIL: FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN THE AUTOPARTS INDUSTRY
Figura 111.1
MEXICO AND BRAZIL: FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN THE ASSEMBLY INDUSTRY ( M i k m d dol!arsL
(Mllions of dollars) 1.500
1
.w IM
a
Source Economic COmmiSSlOn for Lath America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) on the h a s s of information from Secretaria de Economisde MkKiCRand Associaqáo Nacional dm FabTantes da Veieulos Automotores (ANFAVEA). AnuBrm Estatíslico da lndustrra Aritornob//istrca BraslMra 2UO3 (http,i/ www.aniavea.mrn br), Sindicato Nacional da lndljstria da COmponantes para Velculos Automotores (SW DIP EFAS), Perlormance of Autoparts'Ssctor, 2Q03.
TabIe I!I .4 MEXICO AND BRAZIL: DOMESTIC OUTPUT, DOMESTIC SALES OF DOMESTIC OUTPUT, IMPORTS AND EXPORTS (Thousands of units) Mexico
Brazil
Domestic sales
Domestic sales Output
Domestlc output
Imports
Expo&
Output
Domestic output
Imports
1990
803.7
527.5
5.4
276.8
914 5
712.6
0.1
199f
960.9
605.5
$4
79.8
1 051.2 10552 I 097.4 931.2
667.4 5672
88
740.3
B.5
23.7 69.7
523.1
74.0
567.1
960.2 1 073.9 1 391.4 1 581.4
770.9
1992
350.7 388.7 471.5
1Bf.B
34.3
781.1
1211.3
244.9 346.5 44?,9 421.6 451.1 445.9 439.4 370.4
80.2
975 4
1993
1994 1995 1996
1997
IR98 1999 2000
2001 2002 2003
1338.0 1 427.6 1493.7 t 889.5
I 817.8 1774.4 1510.6
135.1 198.2
983.0
245 7
1 073.5 1 434 1
402.7 473 538.1
607.5
972.0
1 403.J 1 325.8 1 t701
16290 1 804.3
2 069.7 I 586.3 1 356.7 1 691.2 t 817.1 1 792.7 1 827.7
1 061.5 12068
188.6
I3593
369.0
1 506.8
224.0
1 640.2 1 187.J
303.2 347.2
1 078.2
178.7 1742
1 315.3 1 423.0 1 383.3 1 354.3
Exports
I 87.3 193.1 311.9 331,s 377.6 263 O 296.3 416 9 400 2 271 B 371 3 390.9
178.3 t 04.4 74.3
-
414.8 535.4
Source, Economic Commisslon for Lattn America and thc Caribbean (FCLAC) on !ha basis 01 Information from Mexicart Automotive Manufactwrs Rssociabon (AMIA) (http.//www a m a corn mx}, and AssociaqBo Nacbna! das Fabricantes de VI?~C~J~OS Aufornoiores (ANFAVEA). Anuarto fslatlstlcoda lndustrra Aularrdo&list/ccr &raa/em 2003 (http:;hivw anfavea combo
EnBr;lzil,al~hriughc~~ttsne~ly tripledbetween 1990 aid 'IOU'i, the pmpensity to export has rcmairied at much lower Ievels than in Mcxicu and varied little i n this penod -around 20%of total output. The growth of cxports 111recent years is explatned hy thc vearch for external markets to sell h e industr1;'s output, in light of decreased dtimcklic rletnand. The decision to ~xpnrthtems niole from r n a c r ~ e c ~ n ~ m i c
crises than from a predefined slralegy. as in the Mexican case. The iiiward onentation ofUrazilmn indiistry can d r a r l y t x seen by examining tkirncstic sales, whicheacjly account for inore than three-fourths of domestic output, In 2 0 2 , domestic prduction acctiunicd for 93% of the industry's k&il sales, and salcs of imported vehicles fell to thcir Firwest level since 1993 (vcc iable III.4).
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
121
The main effect of the entry of important flows of FDI into Brazil’s and Mexico’s automotive sectors is the increase in production capacity. In both countries, this increase was led by United States companies such as General Motors, Ford and Chrysler (before it was purchased by Daimler Benz) and European firms, such as Volkswagen, Fiat, PSA and RenaultNissan. Neither Japanese industry, through Toyota and Honda, nor Korean industry (with Hyundai), both characterized by high competitiveness, played important roles in the establishment of new production capacities. Two important differences exist between Brazilian and Mexican industries: installed capacity and utilization of that capacity. In 2003, installed capacity in Brazil was above 3.1 million units, while Mexico’s stood at some 2.1 million units. However, Mexico’s utilization of its installed capacity was above 80% from 1995 to 2003, while Brazil’s contracted from close to 90% in the mid1990s to 55% at the beginning of this decade (see tables 111.5 and 111.6 and figure 111.3). The difference lies in each country’s ability to define its production and trade strategies. The clear export orientation of Mexico’s industry allows it to maintain a low level of idle installed capacity, whereas Brazil’s industry is much less outward looking and has a high level of surplus capacity, as a result of the crisis in the local and subregional markets. Each country’s propensity to export is, naturally, reflected at the company level. The propensity to export of the principal firms that operate in Mexico, led by Chrysler, Ford, General Motors and Volkswagen, has shown a common cyclical pattern, while Nissan’s
propensity to export has steadily declined, currently standing at about 40% (see figure 111.4). Brazilian companies also showed a common cyclical pattern and a propensity to export of approximately 30% in 2002. By contrast, exports by Fiat, whose parent company is weathering a major crisis, have steadily declined since 1993, despite its implementation of an export strategy; at present it is the least important exporter of the large automotive TNCs in the country (see figure 111.5). Once again, the difference between firms in Mexico and those in Brazil is a reflection of the export orientation of each country’s industry at the aggregate level. Firms in Mexico focus on producing for export to the countries of North America, while Brazilian firms traditionally sell in the domestic market and export according to prevailing macroeconomic conditions in that market. Differences between Mexican and Brazilian industries are also found in their type of specialization. Mexican industry focuses on producing models that are more expensive and more suitable for the needs of consumers in the countries to which it exports -passenger vehicles, sport-utility vehicles and trucks, with an average wholesale value above US$ 16,000 (Scheinman, 2004). Brazil’s automotive industry has specialized in small, low-cost vehicles with high fuel economy, which are affordable for consumers with lower purchasing power. The average wholesale value of this type of vehicles is not more than US$ 6,500. In light of devaluations and MERCOSUR’s automotive policy, Brazil’s automotive industry, like
Table 111.5 MEXICO: INSTALLED CAPACITY FOR VEHICLE PRODUCTION, BY FIRM, 2003
Firm
Plant
Assembled models
General Motors (GM)
Ramos Arizpe Silao Toluca
Monza, Joy/Swing, Cavalier/Sunf ire Suburban, Escalade, Avalanche SiIverado, Kodiak
Nissan/Renault
Aguascalientes Cuernavaca
Sentra, Tsuru y Platina y Clio de Renault Sentra, Tsuru y Scenic de Renault
DaimlerChrysler (DCX)
Toluca Saltillo
PT Cruiser Ram
Volkswagen (VW)
Puebla
New Beetle y Jetta
Ford Motor Co.
Hermosillo Cuautitlan
Focus Ikon y serie-F
Honda BMW Total
Guadalajara Toluca
Accord Serie 3
Capacity (units) 240 O00 250 O00 10 O00 500 O00 260 O00 170 O00 430 O00 260 O00 170 O00 430 O00 425 O00 180 O00 110 O00 290 O00 30 O00 5 O00 2 120 O00
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) on the basis of information provided by the companies.
122
ECLAC
Table 111.6 BRAZIL: INSTALLED CAPACITY FOR VEHICLE PRODUCTION, BY FIRM, 2003 Firm
Plant
Assembled models
Capacity (units)
General Motors (GM)
SBo Caetano do SUI, SBo Paulo Sá0 José dos Campos, SBo Paulo Gravataí, Rio Grande do SUI
Astra, Vectra and Corsa Wind Corsa, Meriva, S10 pickup, Blazer Celta
Ford
Sá0 Bernardo do Campo, SBo Paulo CamaFari, Bahía
Ka, Courier, F-250 pick-up and trucks Fiesta, EcoSport and Courier
Vol kswagen (VW)
Anchieta, Sá0 Bernardo do Campo, SBo Paulo Taubate, Sá0 Paulo Resende, Rio de Janeiro Sá0 José dos Pinhais, Curitiba, Paraná
Gol, Santana, Kombi, Saveiro, Nuevo Polo
180 O00 350 O00 200 O00 730 O00 200 O00 250 O00 450 O00 524 O00
Gol, Parati trucks Golf A4, Audi A3
305 O00 30 O00 160 O00 1 o19 O00
Renault-Nissana
Ayrton Senna, SBo José dos Pinhais, Curitiba, Paraná
Clio, Scenic (Renault) Frontier pickup and the Xterra sport-utility vehicle (Nissan)
120 O00
Fiat
Betim, Minas Gerais Sete Lagoas, Minas Geraisb
Uno, Palio, Siena, Doblo, Marea, Strada lveco Daily and Fiat Ducato
DaimlerChrysler PCX)
Sá0 Bernardo do Campo, SBo Paulo Campo Largo, Paraná Juiz do Fora, Minas Gerais
Trucks and buses Dodge Dakota (pickup) Class A and Class C
Peugeot-Citroen (PW Volvo Honda Toyota Mitsubishi Total Automobiles
Porto Real, Rio de Janeiro
Citroen Xsara and Peugeot 206
610 O00 60 O00 672 O00 60 O00 12 O00 70 O00 142 O00 100 O00
Curitiba, Paraná Sumaré, Sá0 Paulo Indaiatuba, Sá0 Paulo Cataláo Goiás
Trucks civic Corolla L200 pickup
... 45 O00 15 O00 3 O00 3 296 O00 3 106 O00 ~
~~
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) on the basis of information provided by the companies. Note: Modular plants are indicated in bold. In 1998, Renault opened its first factory in the Ayrton Senna Complex, in SBo José dos Pinhais, in the metropolitan area of Curitiba, Paraná (PR). A year later, a second industrial unit of the complex, an engine factory, began operating. In late 2001, the sport-utility vehicle factory was completed. These new investments in Brazil also marked the beginning of a new chapter in Renault’s history, its alliance with Nissan. In December 2001, the sport-utility vehicle factory opened, as did the first factory in the world of the Renault-Nissan alliance to produce Nissan vehicles. With the opening of this factory, Nissan effectively became a domestic producer, a key element in the firm’s strategy to enhance its presence in MERCOSUR. Fiat and lveco formed a 50/50joint venture, with an overall investment of US$240 million.The State of Minas Gerais contributed US$15 million for the development of infrastructure for water, road paving and electricity. MMC Automotores do Brasil is owned by Brazilian businessman Eduardo Souza Ramos and is the brand’s official importer. The Japanese parent company contributes the production license, the unit plan and the manufacturing technique. Mitsubishi assembles L200 trucks in Brazil, with diesel engines and double cabins. Initial production will consist of 3,000 vehicles per year, all for the domestic market.
Argentina’s, understood that the only way to remain viable was to expand its export markets beyond MERCOSUR. In Mexico, local production was insufficient to meet increased demand for compact *O
automobiles, which made the country an attractive market for the low-cost vehicles produced by Brazil’s industry; consequently, the difficulties translated into options for growth and earnings for the different actors involved.1°
In negotiating automotive agreements, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina have sought to form a three-way free trade area. The value of Brazilian exports to Mexico more than doubled over a period of three years, from 1999 to 2001. Shipments from Mexico to Brazil were less successful, because Mexico’s industry produces larger, more expensive and less appealing cars given the depressed domestic demand in Brazil. The next accord was signed in 2002, when Brazil’s and Argentina’s economic situations had improved. This new agreement calls for the creation of a free-trade area in 2006 as well as successive tariff reductions and higher import quotas.
123
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
Figure 111.3 BRAZIL AND MEXICO: UTILIZATION OF PRODUCTIVE CAPACITY TO MANUFACTUREVEHICLES, 1995-2003
(Percentages)
95 90 85 80 75 70 65 60
55 50 I
1995
I
I
I
1996
1997
I
U Brazil
I
1998
1999
I
I
2001
2000
f
I
2002
2003
I
+Mexico
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) on the basis of information from Mexican Automotive Manufacturers Association (AMIA) (http://www.amia.com.mx), and AssociaGáo Nacional dos Fabricantes de Veículos Automotores (ANFAVEA), Anuario Estatistico da Industria Autornobilistica Brasileira 2003 (http://www.anfavea.com.br).
Figure 111.4 MEXICO: PROPENSITY TO EXPORT, BY FIRM, 1993-2003a
(Percentages) 120
1O0 80 60
40
, 1993
I
1994 I-Ford
I
1995 4
1996 G
I
I
1997
M +Chrvsler
1998
I
1999
2000
++Volkswaaen
2001 -O-Nissan
2002
2003
I
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) on the basis of information from Mexican Automotive Manufacturers a
Association (AMIA) (http://www.amia.com.mx). The propensity to export is equal to the ratio of exports to total vehicle output in a year.
This has favoured TNCs with affiliates in both Mexico and Brazil, especially Volkswagen and Ford. In 2002, Mexico replaced Argentina as the leading destination of Brazilian automotive exports. In the late 1990s, modular plants were established in Brazil -and, strangely enough, not in Mexico-
constituting one of the core elements of the restructuring of the world automotive industry. Brazil now has four modular industrial complexes: Ford’s, in CamaGari (Bahia), which produces the Fiesta; General Motors’, in Gravataí (Río Grande do Sul), for the Celta; PSA-Peugeot Citroen’s, in Porto Real (Rio de Janeiro), for the 206
124
ECLAC
Figure 111.5 BRAZIL: PROPENSITY TO EXPORT, BY FIRM, 1993-2003a ( Percentages)
45 40 35 30 25 20
15 10 5
of 1993
I
I
I
1994
1995
I
1996
I
1997
I
I
1998
1999
I
2000
I
2001
f
I
2002
2003
I +Fiat -Ford 4GM -Jt Volkswagen I ,
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of information from Associa@ío Nacional dos Fabricantes a
de Veículos Automotores (ANFAVEA), Anuario fstatisticoda lndustria Autornobilística Brasileira 2003 (http://www.anfavea.com. br). The propensity to export is equal to the ratio of exports to total vehicle output in a year.
model; and Volkswagen’s, in Resende (Rio de Janeiro), which makes trucks (see box 111.6).In addition, to attract FDI, Brazilian States offered generous tax and financial incentives, on the order of US$3.3 billion (see box 111.5). However, these modern plants -which currently account for 20% of the country’s productive capacity- have not succeeded in conquering external markets with their new products; that is, they have not proven to be sufficiently competitive. The firm that has taken the greatest advantage of the automotive agreement with Mexico is Volkswagen, with its traditional Gol (Pointer) model, produced in its old plants on the outskirts of Siio Paulo. In Mexico, where important links have been established with ISIP, Ford recently decided to build its first modular plant. This ratifies the conclusion that the new modular plants have been unable to surpass the advantages of the Toyota Production System.
b) Recent changes in supplier networks in Brazil and Mexico Supplier networks in Mexico and Brazil have had to cope with economic opening and transnationalization, with very different results in each case. Originally, Mexico had two vehicle-parts industries: a domestic sector, promoted by the first automotive-industrydecrees, which limited FDI in the sector to 40% of manufacturers’ capital stock and required vehicle assembly plants to incorporate certain domestic parts in their vehicles as well as to export parts, and a foreign-owned sector, which
assembled parts with imported inputs, within in the context of Mexico’s maquiladora industry and the access mechanism to the United States market known as shared production -HTS 9802, explained in chapter I1 (de María y Campos, 1991). Until the entry into force of NAFTA, Mexico’s autoparts industry had a larger market share of United States imports than did the country’s automotive industry. NAFTA ushered in two major changes in Mexican industry: it consolidated the transnationalization of the domestic autoparts industry and it allowed the use of an increasingly large share of parts produced by the maquiladora industry (from 55% in 1994 to 100% in 2001) in vehicles assembled in Mexico. The autoparts industry currently accounts for 6.9% of manufacturing GDP, employs 15% of the labour force and generates 10% of the country’s manufacturing exports. There are 875 registered suppliers -60 first-tier and 815 secondor third-tier companies (BANCOMEXT, 2002). United States companies such as Delphi and Visteon dominate the industry (CEESP, 2001). As a result, Mexico’s autoparts industry specialized in labour-intensive products, and the value of the industry’s output rose from some US$ 10 billion in 1993-1995 to nearly US$ 17 billion in 2000-2002. The 1993-1995 trade surplus nevertheless turned into a deficit of some US$ 7 billion in 2000-2002 (INA, 2003). The greater international competitiveness of Mexico’s autoparts industry was, therefore, based on static advantages such as lower wages, geographic proximity and special access to the United
Foreign inwslment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
t25
ed
mdular p been corn upple
includo those that
n. by
r conditl
nts. In g .. narnave se1. up .in mese
..
nsoortation casts Iraoilitvl or thaf
vRhtc1o. maniikchirprs . . . ..- . . (Ford . - tn ;
een
rofoundly changed relationships beween automakers and supplic the global level this new praducti
greater flexibility tor the manufachiring firm. Stifl, evidence sh final manulachuring a subassernbty operati carried out
ehieles at a sing te location, Mndirlar nlantr' IarMiimF: production ch
conslderln
The added value inm industrial condominiums For example, in General
construction of new riiortular plants,
thereby beaming a privileged laboratory for tsslrng Ihs global new plants 111 llie tluturnotive chain -
autcmakers reduced Ihe riumbe direct suppliers from nearly 500 about 150 and created a riew level o hierarchy for t+tc c h a w a modular
Gerais The rcmdnmg parts are
ompanies in QIO Grande do SUI Therefore, the strategy DI the companies that took part in the
wed with 60.5% b e b e e n t980 989. Since 1995, the dedtne cvcn sharper. as Sá0 Paula d only 35 4% of dl new plan
(Zilbovicius, Marx a
fside %o Paul
redticc thc iisk of interrupliori octivcry and attempt to eqwre technofogical updates; ralrng potential suppliers' produclbi processes; and e rgineering arid product-dmelapmen capdcily. The last criterion is thn decisive factor for m n d d s whose dssign w x defined local y by tb>c Brazilian subsidiary (Salerno, Marx and 7lIhnviciiis, 3003) Hence, once the
automakers define a new mode[*$ characteristics a n d verity potcntiat
capacities already instsllc centra! units. basimlly in t area This, together with a content o' imported parts, makes h e new assembly unlts my different From the supoljer iietwork Ihtlt existed prior Lw [tie irwestment boom in t h sernnd ~ half of tfiB 1 9 9 0 ~ which ~ had a higher degree ot vertical integration There'nw, :Re original expcctatjons behind !he estahlishinent of suppliers in thR lrdmt?:al condominiums whcrc
Lastly, the macmmonomic instability that ha5 heset Brazi! in r w m t years has sitbsimtially attcred the expectations that automaker ancc harboured regardrng the PCrfOrmance of the 40cd marhel. Economtc dectrne meant a sharp tall III dornestic demand, leavrng a significant portiori uf yruductive
ECLAC
126
"
"
special characteristics of Ian production have greatly
constrained the country's capwity export. especially since this new ty of plant was originally conceived to
third markets. Nonelhelesu, this experience has not yet ptc expected benefits; but with belle domestic ~conomicconditioris th results might Impraw
s, "Exploring ihe Reasons for Ditfereni Holes o1 Module Suppliers in a Car Assemkdy Planr, im. MÍnisWrede kt Recherche (Paris. 11-13 June 2OW):Yannick Lung. JearbJacques C h a r a r m
Coping lrllh mr~iy-fhxibl&pmduetiPmsystemsmrpmduct varhty m the auto Indusi,y,Aldersbot,
States market As Mcxico'x autoparts induslry became tightly integrated with the United States supplier network. it carnc to rcproducc the same conflictive relatioilships without reaping the corresponding benefits (the new role of systems suppliers for modular plants). Iiidustrial and technological advancement was limited, most notahly ttj huinan-resources training and soine productive linkages, since there was little transfer and axsirnilation o f technology or entrepreneurial development (Mommore and Rarron, Zt'W). Thc autciparts industry's heightened internauond competitiveness was accompanied by the drastic curtailmcnl d i t s doniestic content, which in turn brought about a vicious circle between foreign autoparts mdalguiurers wisliiiig to set up in Mexico but facing difficultier, in finding local suppliers that met their input requirements and local suppliers intereqred in wlling to foreign finns but lacking the required capability to do so (SEC box T13.7). I n Brazil, the aiitomotive chain hax sccn majur transfmations in the last decade (Salerno. M x x and Zilbavicius, 2003; Posthuma, 2001 ). Especially following thc t r d c opcning, auLoinakers sought a significant reduction in the. number of suppliers, and cncauragcd thesc wppl ie rs 10 begin their tr ansforinati on into manufacturers of modules or systems. The largest suppliers wcrc acquircd by Ctireign companies. Domestic companies c u m n t l y account for little more than 20% of the capital sfmk in thc suhr;cch-. The uansnationalizatim of the sector in Brant has brought about ngni ficaril changes. First, the automakers have reduced the number of direct suppliers from some SO0 to about 150,vignificantl y increasing the iinportance of tirst-tier suppliers in the production chain (see diagram IFT.4). Sccrmd, Lhhc new module suppliers develop parts and components for new models outside Rrazil, in c h c
collabornthn with vehicle assemblers. This has meant a significant loss in the local capacity for technological development that many Brazilian autoparts companies once possessed. T h e models in which Rra7il spcccialiacs make it very difficult for a local supplier to compete in thc intcmational markct. Lastly, Ihe proportion of imported components used in the modules produced by Icacling (rirst-lier) Brazilinii suppliers has iiicreased substantially. These structural changes are reflected in the stibsectw's performance in Brazil. In 2002, hccause or strong concentration and the disappearance of many companies, the suhscctor rcconlcd a salcs vnlurne similar to that of 1Y92 (USS
IC3 billion), down from a high nf
US4 17.358 billion in 1997, and employment declined frrm 23 1.000 tu 168,000 jubh (frorii 1332 to 2002). These transformations have not greatly altered thc tar@ markct of Brazil's autoparts production, with the leadins clients cunliiiuiiig to be vehicle assemblers (nearly bO% of sales). Alrhrwgh parts cxprjrts have, in facl, iricreased -from US'$ 2.312 hilhon to US$ 3 Xi?? hillion hctwccn 1992 and 2002 impom have g o w n at a faster pace. from 1: JS$ 1.251, hillirm t o USS 3.380 billion. Since 1997, ths has translated intc a rising trade deficit, while total idle capacity stanch at ricarly 40% (SINDIPECAS, 2003). Changes in the hierarchical level5 of the production chain have nnt clcarly crjrrcspanded to the new strateRies of automakers and their modular plants. Autoparts firms h a w altcrrrpkd (o rninirnize the risk of betting their capital on a single customer and h a w avoidcd expanding their productive capacity and optimized existing capacity, normally at their cenrral u n i t s , located principally i n the S5;o Paulo area: therefore. it would appear unrealistic to cxpcct thche new i m d u l a i plants to be highly verticalized suppliers
127
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
est! requirements. i
hard-pressed to find lmal input sumliers that mcct their reauirernents. Suppliers, particularly Mexican-
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cornoanies
are conCB1 to the indu
-uriderstwd principally as -@I with deliverv times and flaxlbll supply- financial capacity anc
.,**,.
..
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other reamns bccau
need to clase the g undnrstand ;he na
normally very dsrnanding and car certifying the quality and vwtfying efficiency in thew suppliars' opera performance. For a firm to quatffy a
. .
.-,
.-.
private sector (Centros de Oesa ">
.....
".
I.
meet t~ series of condition qualrty-qualification 1 ISO 140I10, QSSdOO
ted to extending, integ svliddtiny ftre supplier
technological capabili reqtiiremcnts Ncarty rigorously evaluate Ih
be extended and can the qualiqvotthc
incipatly liers two and autumotive chain ara
most frequently imported for
dcwlopment have been su
128
ECLAC
38 component suppliers (1 7%)
3 suppliers of modules, subsets and systems (19%) and 38 of components (17%)
13 component suppliers (6%) I
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), on the basis of Escola politécnica da Universidade de Sá0 Paulo, Departamento de Engenharia de Produ@o, Grupo de estudos em Trabalho, Tecnologia e Organizaglo (EPUSP-PRO/TTO), Mapeamento da nova configumpjo da cadeia automotiva brasileira, Sá0 Paulo, 2001.
integrated into the assembly line (EPUSP/PRP/TTO, 2003). Only Ford and GM have incorporated producers of most of the modules they need into their assembly lines, but they have done so without incorporating much added value into the modular plants. In other words, Brazil’s autoparts industry has lost local-development capacity and domestic added value as a result of automaker requirements. Sharp contraction in domestic demand, improved product quality and good relations with the assembly plants and their parent companies allowed the industry to raise its international competitiveness, albeit by using imported inputs and reducing domestic content. Although new technologies have been incorporated, productive linkages have been reduced, and the industry thus appears to be following a path increasingly similar to that of Mexico.
c)
Challenges for Brazil’s and Mexico’s automotive industries
Mexico and Brazil face a common challenge but different domestic problems. The common challenge is to see that the genuinely most advanced firms in the automotive industry -Toyota and Honda- set up major operations in their countries, so as to take advantage of all the benefits these firms might offer in international production systems, organizational practices and supplier networks (Mortimore, 2003a). To have world-class automotive industries, they need the presence of cuttingedge companies. They also face different domestic challenges. To continue expanding its automotive industry, Mexico needs to take advantage of free-trade agreements that it
Foreign tnvestmenl in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
129
has signed other than NAFTA and to increase local content, in coinpliance with these agreements' rules of ongin. Rrwil milst use more of i t s existing capacity by seeking access to new markets. Along with revitalizing the durricdc markcl, i t must rnakc hcttcr use of rntidcrn modular plants with an appropriate, world-class supplier network, to offer quality prducts l o global markcls.
agreements with other count1 ies -including the agreemerit it is ncptiating with Japan- and in crmply with rules of origin set out In these agreements. To take advantage of its access to hese markets, Mexico needs to significantly increase the Mexican content of its vehicles and nutoparts intended for export (see diagram TlT 5). In this, the Mexican automotive industry has been only partially xuccc~sful.Thc main prohlcrn i~thc significant imbalance between vehicle assemblers and parts manufactui-ers. Between 1990 and 2000, vehicle assemhlcrs r a i d their lahour productivity hy 57%, their added value by 59% and their employment by only 5%.
M ~ x i cF.'o automotive induslry; nide in Mexico? Mexico currently depends excessively on autoparts imports from the United States and lacks a suitable supplicr network allowing it te henefit from its free-trade
Diagram 111.5 MEXICO: PREFERENTIAL ACCESS TO LEADING MARKETS THROUGH FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
rZnrth 4mcrican Free Trade Apreement
Source Economic Comrnrssiorl for Latln America and the CafibbBan (ECLAC) Reglonal contenl required by each agreement
130
ECLAC
In the same period, autoparts firms operating outside the maquiladora structure increased their labour productivity by 11%, their added value by 39% and their employment by 33%, whereas the firms within the system of parts-manufacturing maquiladoras raised their labour productivity by only 8%, added value by 52% and employment by 52% (McKinsey & Co., 2003).” This opened an increasingly wide gap in Mexico’s automotive industry, insofar as the competitiveness of the vehicle-assembly industry improved much more than did that of companies manufacturing parts and components. Vehicle assemblers better utilized Mexico’s advantages to augment output, raise labour productivity and increase added value, without excessively expanding their labour force. To a certain extent, they were able to do so because their Mexican suppliers specialized in labour-intensive activities. The supplier network of United States vehicle assemblers continued to have a strong effect on assembly operations in Mexico, whereas suppliers in Mexico maintained a subsidiary or complementary role, basically limited to lowering production costs. Consequently, the progress by vehicle assemblers was different from that of manufacturers of parts and components in Mexico. That is, the problems between vehicle assemblers and parts suppliers that characterize the United States automotive industry were replicated in Mexico. The key issue is the difficulty in establishing in Mexico an autoparts supplier network sufficiently integrated, competitive and sophisticated to support efforts to position Mexico’s automotive industry in the global market as well as in the North American market (Carillo, 2001; Dussel, 1997; Romo, 2003). The current network of parts and components suppliers is dominated by subsidiaries of TNCs, especially from the United States, that import a high proportion of their inputs from that country (USITC, 2002; United States Department of Commerce, 2003a). This particular characteristic greatly weakens the multiplier effect of the value added by the Mexican automotive industry, in contrast with the remarkable increase in the country’s foreign trade (UNCTAD, 2003a). This reflects the weakness of the network of Mexican autoparts suppliers, which continue to specialize in reducing costs for the United States automotive industry, rather than aiming to consolidate a
*
world-class base in which factors related to the capacity for innovation (research and development, organizational practices, etc.), the management of complex technologies and the establishment of ISIP predominate (Ordorica, 2003). Transnational vehicle producers with plants in Mexico have limited their efficiency seeking to reducing production costs through savings in wages -without establishing a supplier network in the country- unlike the cutting-edge firms in the industry, which have gained market share on the basis of competitive advantages created, among other means, through innovation in advanced manufacturing-production systems, the establishment of supplier networks, technological capabilities, organizational practices, design capacity and training of skilled human resources. To successfully compete in other markets, the Mexican automotive industry must design and implement appropriate policies allowing it to move forward from an export platform -based on low wages and privileged access and geographic proximity to a single markettowards an integrated manufacturing centre that will compete on the basis of skilled human resources, technological capabilities and an integrated chain of world-class suppliers. In recent years there has been some indication that these changes have begun to take place. The Mexican Automotive Manufacturers Association (AMIA) and the Ministry of the Economy proposed doubling Mexico’s automotive-production capacity by 20 1O, to four million units per year.’* Some firms have, moreover, announced new investments for production in Mexico of special models for the world market. Ford expects to invest US$ 1.6 billion to build an industrial park of suppliers -along the lines of Brazil’s modular plants- and to modernize its Hermosillo plant for the production of its new Futura model, to be sold in the United States market starting in 2005 (AméricaEconomía, 2003). Volkswagen announced that it would invest some US$2.0 billion over the next five years, to begin production of trucks for the Mexican market and of three passenger automobiles: the Golf and the Jetta for the United States market, and the Bora for the world market (Just-auto.com, 2003d). Another element that could instil confidence in the country’s situation and its future possibilities is that many plants in Mexico already surpass those in the United States
Maquiladoras had special rules allowing for the temporary importation of machinery, equipment, materials and components to be assembled in Mexico and subsequently exported. During the NAFTA transition phase a progressively higher percentage of maquiladora products was permitted in the assembly of vehicles in Mexico. This would mean increasing export production from 1.5 to 3 million vehicles and output capacity for the domestic market from five hundred thousand to one million units. The programme has not yet been officially approved, however.
Foreign investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003
131
and Canada in labour productivity (United States, USITC, 2002). This is the case of the General Motors plant in Silao and DaimlerChrysler’s factories in Saltillo and Toluca (J.D. Power &Associates, 2003). Therefore, since 40 assembly plants in the world might have to be shut down, including 12 in North America, Mexico would appear to be poised to take advantage of the restructuring of the United States and global automotive industry (United States, USITC, 2002). Nonetheless, the challenge currently faced by Mexico’s automotive industry is more complex than it appears on the surface. In a context of worldwide idle capacity on the order of 25% to 33% and in light of the decrease in domestic output in recent years, expecting Mexico to double its productive capacity would seem extremely optimistic.13 That is, the problem would appear to be the quality of the production process rather than the number of vehicles produced. Another important problem is that the supplier network specializing in labour-intensive products is beginning to lose its competitive edge. Delphi -with extensive operations in Mexico- has stated that the country has become less attractive for establishing links in the firm’s ISIP vis-8vis competitors such as China (Just-auto.com, 2003e; Expansión, 2003; Lara and Carrillo, 2003). In sum, in its current stage of development, Mexico’s automotive chain lacks two of the decisive driving forces behind the worldwide restructuring of the automotive industry. First, it has a very minor stake in the ISIP of the most technologically advanced firms in the industry, most notably Toyota, and, second, it does not have the supplier network needed to comply with the regional rules of origin set out in its free-trade agreements with countries other than the United States (Automotive Intelligence News, 2003).
for the sector, and the specific characteristics of specialization by Brazil’s automotive industry have greatly limited the possibilities for placing part of the excess output in international markets. Specialization in compact automobiles has allowed Brazilian industry to gain economies of scale, protect its domestic market vis-a-vis the trade opening and take advantage of new trade agreements, inasmuch as Brazil’s potential trading partners do not specialize in this category of vehicles. This specialization and, especially, the programme to promote the production of low-cost vehicles are, nonetheless, the main obstacle to Brazilian industry significantly increasing its exportable supply. The main challenge for Brazil is, then, to adapt its production to global, regional and national needs, so as to increase the scale of production and promote linkages with the international economy. It appears inevitable, then, that Brazil will consolidate a model of specialization in larger compact (platform “B”) vehicles, to maintain and enhance the competitiveness of the domestic production chain. Brazilian industry should move beyond the low profit levels of economy models and the stagnant domestic market and focus on more sophisticated, powerful and expensive vehicles that will be more accepted in international markets, using the same platform as its compact cars. Brazil could gradually specialize in fully-equipped compact vehicles, or simply small vehicles, but not economy models. Noteworthy examples are the new Volkswagen Polo and General Motors Corsa, and, particularly, several recently launched models -the Ford EcoSport, General Motors Meriva, Citroen C3 and Honda Fit.14 These upscale compact vehicles compete with midsize models such as the Volkswagen Golf and the General Motors Astra, and they target younger, more active consumers. These new models have been quite well received in the Brazilian market and have had good results in other Latin American markets, as well. Automotive executives say these upscale vehicles should close the strategic equation and translate into a locally and internationally integrated production chain.
Brazil’s automotive industry: exporting to survive In Brazil, the introduction of production at modern modular plants coincided with the contraction of domestic demand, leading to enormous idle capacity. The strategies of the vehicle assemblers, the national policies l3
l4
Consequently, some analysts doubt that this objective of Mexican automotive policy can be met. Among developing countries expected to have an output above one million units in 2010, Mexico will likely not show a very significant increase. Indeed, these analysts expect Mexico to increase output by 14.8% between 2003 and 2010, while they put forth more encouraging estimates for other developing countries, such as China (85.7%), Thailand (61.2%), Iran (47.2%) and Brazil (44.9%) (PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2004). The EcoSport is a good example of how production platforms can be shared. This model has much of the same equipment as the new Fiesta, but on the outside it is another vehicle. It established a new segment that used to consist of only imported vehicles. The same is true of the General Motors Meriva, which uses the Corsa’s platform, engine and gearbox. Still, it is a very different vehicle, with a 1.8 engine, and it has introduced the segment of compact sport-utility vehicles. Another example is the Citroen C3, made by PSA Peugeot Citroen since 2003 at the Porto Real plant. These models are joined by the Honda Fit, produced on the platform recently inaugurated by this Japanese firm.
132
ECLAC
In Brazil’s domestic market, the automakers’ strategy has been to attract consumers to this new segment of midsize vehicles and thereby raise their profit margins. To this end, the automakers have proposed changes in the tax structure that would set a uniform Tax on Industrialized Products (impost0 sobre produtos industrializados, IPI) for all types of vehicles, regardless of their cylinder ~apacity.’~ Some of these changes began in mid-2002. This policy is a tentative solution that will allow automakers to improve operational profitability, although it does not sustainably and permanently solve the underlying problem of the competitiveness of the automotive industry’s production chain. To date, the most important market-expansion efforts have been made through MERCOSUR and, more recently, through agreements with Mexico. Increasing exports to new markets is not a simple process. Given the fact that Brazil’s currency has been depreciating since 1999,which has resulted in lower local costs measured in foreign currency and, therefore, increased competitiveness, exports have remained relatively constant and concentrated in a few markets. A sharply undervalued exchange rate has not been an efficient export-promotion instrument, amid heightened competition in external markets and the depreciation of the currencies of some of the country’s competitors. Moreover, the financial costs of recent investments and
operational costs linked to higher imported content diminish the profitability and competitiveness of Brazilian products (Sarti, 2003). Devaluation hurt the interests of the affiliates of foreign companies in Brazil. The orientation towards the domestic market produced a strong imbalance between the country’s dollar-denominated debt and its income from sales in local currency. Companies have attempted to improve their economic and financial indicators by increasing their exports. Brazilian authorities, in turn, have sought to improve and expand incentives to export, so as to encourage the generation of a surplus in the sector’s trade balance. In the recent process of restructuring production in Brazil’s automotive industry, investments by TNCs were largely matched by contributions of government resources and tax breaks at the federal, state and municipal levels. In addition, IPI rates were recently cut to stimulate domestic demand and encourage lines of financing for exports. Hence, government and firms should join forces to raise Brazilian industry’s propensity to export. Policymakers and economic authorities could seek alternatives to expand and diversify the external markets for the different products made by this industry, while affiliates could promote better intrafirm trade relationships, basically in engines and parts, and between TNCs and autoparts companies in Brazil or within MERCOSUR.
D. CONCLUSIONS The automotive industry is being transformed on the basis of large investments by the leading TNCs seeking efficiency in their ISIP. To an important degree, the sector’s new competitiveness comes from the supplier networks. A small group of developing countries has tried to seize this opportunity. An analysis of the automotive industry in Mexico and Brazil provides some lessons to better understand this phenomenon. As noted in the conclusions to chapter I, the host country seeks to attract TNCs to benefit from their presence in the domestic economy. Clearly, the benefits are not automatic but come from an appropriate combination of quality FDI with sound national policies. Table 1.6 in chapter I pointed to the kind of problems that have emerged in Latin America when the underlying goals of FDI and national policy did not match. l5
Mexico and Brazil have been favoured, to a certain extent, by this opportunity. Mexico has improved its international competitiveness based on FDI by United States TNCs seeking efficiency for their regional integrated production systems. Brazil, in turn, had a solid automotive industry based on United States and European FDI, which supplied, above all, the domestic market, enjoyed significant productive linkages and later came to establish new modular plants. The TNCs have tended, however, to utilize the host country’s static advantages, for which reason the positive effects are not long-lasting. For example, the evolution of Mexico’s and Brazil’s automotive industries points to a sort of inverse correlation between international competitiveness and productive linkages, which limits the role of each country’s supplier network. The meteoric
The Tax on Industrialized Products is a federal tax levied on manufactured products at the factory gate, in the case of Brazilian goods, or when they are shipped, in the case of imported goods.
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rise in Mexico’s competitiveness was achieved, to a certain extent, at the expense of an integrated supplier base. Consequently, Mexico is not currently in a position to properly take advantage of its free-trade agreements, since it does not have a supplier network allowing it to comply with the respective rules of regional origin. In Brazil, specialization in compact cars limited its possibilities to export; the opening of the automotive industry weakened the existing supplier network; and the new modular plants have not proven sufficiently competitive in external markets. In both cases, the supplier network has lacked the competitiveness to allow for the industry’s sustained growth. In addition to issues linked to the development of competitive supplier bases related to transnational automakers from the United States and Europe, it is noteworthy that the industry’s most technologically advanced firm -Toyota- which has the most competitive and least conflictive supplier network,
has such a limited presence in Latin America. Clearly, this region did not represent a priority for Toyota’s ISIP. Toyota’s emphasis on establishing a broad supplier network in North America during the last 10 years suggests that Mexico could have played a significant role if the country’s authorities had made an effort to attract the firm (Mortimore and Vergara, 2004). The weakness of the supplier bases and the absence of cutting-edge companies are some of the problems faced by Latin America’s automotive industry. The industry’s opening to FDI, consistent with the transnational automakers’ new efficiency-seeking strategy, led to a sharp scaling back of the industry’s reach in the region and its concentration in two countries: Mexico and Brazil. If a proper combination of quality FDI with sound national policies is not achieved, the industry’s current international competitiveness could prove short-lived.
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Anuario estadístico de América Latina y el Caribe/ Statistical yearbook for Latin America and the Caribbean (bilingüe).2003,636 p.
La inversiónextranjeraenAmérica Latinay el Caribe,2003,146 p. Foreign investment of Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003,146 p.
ECLAC publications
Panorama de la inserción internacional de America Latina y el Caribe,2002-2003,240p. Latin America and the Caribbean in the world economy, 2002-2003,238p.
ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR LATINAMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Casilla 179-D Santiago, Chile
Libros de la CEPAL
Publications may be accessed at: www.eclac.cVpublicaciones
78 Los transgénicosenAmérica Latinay el Caribe: un debateabierto,
CEPAL Review CEPA1 Review first appeared in 1976 as part of the Publications Programme of the Economic Commissionfor LatinAmerica and the Caribbean, its aim being to make a contributionto the study of the economic and social development problems of the region.The views expressed in signed articles, including those by Secretariat staff members, are those of the authors and therefore do not necessarily reflect the point of view of the Organization. CEPAL Review is published in Spanish and English versions three times a year. Annual subscriptioncostsfor 2003 are US$30for the Spanishversion and US$ 35 for the English version. The price of single issues is US$l5 in both cases. The cost of a two-year subscription (2002-2003) is US$50 for Spanishlanguageversion and US$60 for English. Revistade la CEPAL, número extraordinario:CEPALCINCUENTA AÑOS, reflexiones sobre America Latinay el Caribe, 1998,376p. (out of stock)
Annual reports Issues for previous years also available Panorama social deAmérica Latina, 2002-2003,348 p. Social panorama of latin america,2002-2003,340p. Balancepreliminar de las economías deAmérica Latina y el Caribe, 2003,172 p. Preliminary overview of the economies of Latin America and the Caribbean, 2003, 168 p. Estudio económico de America Latina y el Caribe 2002-2003, 414 p.
Economic survey of Latin America and the Caribbean 20022003,408 p,
Situacióny perspectivas. Estudio económicode América Latina y el Caribe2002-2003,52p. Current conditions and outlook. Economic Survey of Latin America and the Caribbean2002-2003,52p.
2004,416 p.
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Una década de desarrollo social en America Latina 1990-1999, 2004,300 p.
76 A decade of light and shadow. Latin America and the Caribbean in the 7990s, 2003,366 p. 76 Une décennie d’ombres et de h i e r e s . L’Amérique latine et les Caraibesdans les années 90,2003,401 p. 75 Gestiónurbanapara el desarrollosostenibleenAmérica Latina y el Caribe, Ricardo Jordán y Daniela Simioni (compiladores),2003, 264 p. 74 Mercadosde tierras agrícolas en América Latina ye1 Caribe: una realidadincompleta,PedroTejo (compilador),2003, 416 p. 73 Contaminaciónatmosféricay concienciaciudadana,2003. Daniela Simioni (Compiladora),260 p.
72 Los caminos hacia una sociedad de la información en América Latina y el Caribe,2003,139 p.
72 Road maps to wards an information society in Latin America and the Caribbean,2003,130 p. 71 Capital social y reducción de la pobreza en América Latina y el Caribe.En busca de un nuevoparadigma,2003, RaúlAtriay Marcelo Siles, Editors, CEPAUMichiganState University, 590 p.
70 Meeting the millennium poverty reduction targets in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2002, ECLAC/IPENUNDP,70 p. 69 El capital social campesino en la gestión del desarrollo rural. Díadas,equipos,puentes y escaleras,2002, John Durston, 156 p. 68 La sostenibilidad del desarrollo en América Latina y el Caribe: desafíos y oportunidades, 2002,251 p. 68 The sustainability of development in Latin America and the Caribbean: challenges and opportunities, 2002, 248 p. 67 Growth with stability, financing for developmentin the new international context, 2002, 178 p. 66 Economic reforms, growth and employment. Labour markets in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2001, Jürgen Weller, 205 p,
65 The income distribution problem in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2001, Samuel Morley, 169 p. 64 Structural reforms, productivity and technological change in Latin America, 2001, Jorge Katz, 143 p. 63 Investment and economic reforms in Latin America, 2001, Graciela Moguillanskyy Ricardo Bielschowsky, 186 p.
62 Equity,developmentandcitizenship(abridgededition),2001, 86 p.
62 L'equite, le développementet la citoyenneté.Version condensee, 61
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2001,110p. Apertura económica y (des)encadenamientosproductivos- Reflexionessobre el complejo lácteo enAmérica Latina, 2001 ,Martine Dirven (compiladora), 396 p. A territorial perspective: Towards the consolidation of human settlements in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2001 , 157 p. Juventud, población y desarrollo en América Latina y el Caribe. Problemas, oportunidadesy desafjos, 2001 , 457 p. La dimensión ambiental en el desarrollo de América Latina, 2001 , 265 p. Las mujeres chilenasen los noventa. Hablan las cifras, 2000,213p. Protagonismo juvenil en proyectos locales: lecciones del cono sur, 2001 , 170 p. Financial globalization and the emerging economies, José Antonio Ocampo, Stefan0 Zamagni, Ricardo Ffrench-Davis y Carlo Pietrobelli, 2000,328 p. La CEPALen sus 50 años. Notas de un seminarioconmemorativo, 2000,149 p. Transformacionesrecientes en el sector agropecuariobrasileño, lo que muestran los censos, M. Beatriz de A. David, Philippe Waniez, Violette Brustlein, Enali M. De Biaggi, Paulade Andrade Rollo y Monica dos Santos Rodrigues, 1999, 127 p. Un examen de la migración internacional en la Comunidad Andina, 1999, 114 p. Nuevas políticas comercialesen América Latina y Asia. Algunos casos nacionales, 1999,583 p. Privatización portuaria: bases, alternativas y consecuencias, Larry Burkhalter, 1999,248 p. Teorias y metáforas sobre el desarrollo territorial, Sergio Boisier, 1999,113 p. Las dimensiones sociales de la integración regional en América Latina, Rolando Franco y Armando Di Filippo, compiladores, 1999, 223 p. El pacto fiscal. fortalezas, debilidades, desafíos, 1998, 280 p. (out of stock) The fiscal covenant. Sfrenghts, weaknesses, challenges, 1998,290 p. Agroindustriay pequeña agricultura: vinculos, potencialidadesy oportunidadescomerciales, 1998, 166 p. La grieta de las drogas. Desintegración social y politicas públicas en América Latina, 1997,218 p. La brecha de la equidad. América Latina, el Caribe y la Cumbre Social, 1997,218 p. The equity Gap. Latin America, the Caribbean and the Social Summit, 1997,218 p. Quince años de desempeño económico. América Latina y el Caribe, 1980-1995,1996, 127 p. The economic experience of the last fifteen years. Latin America and the Caribbean, 7980-7995, 1996,125 p. Fortalecer el desarrollo. lnteracciones entre macro y microeconomh, 1996,116 p. Strengthening development. The interplay of macro- and microeconomics, 1996, 116 p. Las relaciones económicas entre América Latina y la Unión Europea: el papel de los servicios exteriores, 1996,395 p. América Latina y el Caribe:políticas para mejorar la inserción en la economíamundial, 1995,314 p. (out of stock)
40 Latin America and the Caribbean:policies to improve linkages with the global economy, 1995,308 p. 39 El regionalismoabiertoenAméricaLatina y el Caribe. La integración económica en servicio de la transformación tecnológica,1994,120p. 39 Open regionalism in Latin America and the Caribbean. Economic
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integration as a contribution to changing productions patterns with social equity, 1994,103 p. Imágenes socialesde la modernizacióny la transformación tecnológica, 1995,198 p. familia y futuro: un programa regional en América Latinay el Caribe, 1994,137 p. Family and future: a regional programme in Latin America and the Caribbean,1994,123 p. Cambiosen el perfil de las familias: la experiencia regional, 1993, 434 p. Población, equidady transformaciónproductiva, 1993,23ed. 1993, 158 p. (out of stock) Population, social equity and changing production patferns, 1993,153p. Ensayos sobre coordinación de políticas macroeconómicas, 1992, 249 p. Educacióny conocimiento: eje de la transformaciónproductiva con equidad,1992,269p. (out of stock) Educationand knowledge:basic pillars of changingproduction patterns with socialequity, 1992,257 p. Equidady transformaciónproductiva: un enfoqueintegrado,1992, 254 p. Social equity and changing production patterns: an integrated approach, 1992,252 p. El desarrollo sustentable: transformaciónproductiva, equidad y medio ambiente,1991, 146p. Sustainable development: changing production patterns, social equity and the environment,1991,146 p. Evaluaciones del impactoambientalenAmérica Latina y el Caribe, 1991, 232 p. (out of stock) lnventarios y cuentas del patrimonionatural enAmérica Latina y el Caribe, 1991, 335 p. A collection of documents on economic relations between the Unitedstates and CentralAmerica, 7906-7956,1991, 398 p. Los grandescambios y la crisis. lmpacto sobre la mujer enAmerica Latina ye/ Caribe,1990,271 p. Major changes and crisis. The impact on women in Latin America and the Caribbean,1992,279 p. América Latina y el Caribe: opciones para reducir el peso de la deuda, 1990,2aed. 118 p. Latin America and the Caribbean: options to reduce the debt burden, 1990,llO p. Transformaciónproductiva con equidad, 1990,43ed. 1991, 185 p. Changing production patterns with social equity, 1990,3d ed. 1991,177p. (out of stock) The environmentaldimension in developmentplanning,1991, 302 p. La crisis urbana enAmérica Latina y el Caribe: reflexionessobre alternativas de solución, 1990,197p. (out of stock)
Recent co-publications On occasion ECLAC concludes agreements for the co-publication of texts that may be of special interest to other international organizations or to publishing houses. In the latter case, the publishing houses have exclusive sales and distribution rights. El desarrollo económico en los albores del siglo XXl, José Antonio Ocampo (editor), CEPAUAlfaomega. Los recursos del desarrollo. Lecciones de seis aglomeraciones agroindustrialesen América Latina, Carlos Guaipatín (compilador), CEPAUAlfaomega. Medir la economíade los países según el sistema de cuentas nacionales, Michel Séruzier, CEPAUAlfaomega, 2003. Globalization and Development. A Latin American and Caribbean Perspective, Edited by José Antonio Ocampo and Juan Martin, CEPAUAlfaomega,2003. Globalización y desarrollo. Una reflexión desde América Latina y el Caribe, José Antonio Ocampo y Juan Martin (editores), CEPAU Alfaomega, 2003. Autonomía o ciudadanía incompleta. El Pueblo Mapuche en Chile y Argentina, Isabel Hernández, CEPAUPehuén, 2003. Los caminoshacia una sociedad de la informaciónen América Latinay el Caribe, CEPAUAIf aomega. Reformas económicasy formación.Guillermo Labarca (coordinador), CEPAUGTZ/OIT-CINTERFOR, 2003. El desarrollode complejos forestales enAmérica latina, Néstor Bercovich y Jorge Katz (editores), CEPAUAlfaomega, 2003 Territorioy competitividaden la agroindustriaen México. Condicionesy propuestas de política para los clusters del limón mexicano en Colimay la pifia en Veracruz,Enrique Dussel Peters, CEPALPlaza y Valdés, 2002 Capitalsocial rural. Experienciasde Méxicoy Centroamérica,Margarita Flores y Fernando Rello, CEPAUPlaza y Valdés, 2002. Eqüidade, desenvolvimento e cidadania, José Antonio Ocampo, CEPAUEditor Campus, 2002. Crescimento, emprego e eqüidade; O lmpacto das Reformas Econ6micas na América Latina e Caribe, Barbara Stallings e Wilson Peres, CEPAUEditor Campus, 2002. Crescer corn Estabilidade, O financiamentodo desenvolvimento no novo contexto internacional, José Antonio Ocampo, CEPAUEditoraCampus, 2002. Pequeñas y medianas empresas industriales en América Latina y el Caribe, Wilson Peres y Giovanni Stumpo (coordinadores), CEPAUSigloXXI, México. Aglomeraciones mineras y desarrollo local en América Latina, Rudolf M. Buitelaar (compilador), CEPAUAlfaomega, Colombia, 2002. Panorama de la agriculturaen América Latinay el Caribe 1990-2000I Survey of Agriculture in Latin America and the Caribbean 1990-2000,CEPAUIICA, 2002. Reformas, crecimiento y políticas sociales en Chile desde 7973, Ricardo Ffrench-Davis y Barbara Stallings (editores), CEPAULOM Ediciones, 2001. Financial Crises in ‘Successful’ Emerging Economies, Ricardo Ffrench-Davis(editor), CEPAUBrookings InstitutionPress, 2001. Crecer con estabilidad. El financiamiento del desarrollo en un nuevo contextointernacional,José Antonio Ocampo (coordinador),CEPAU Alfaomega, Colombia, 2001.
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C l AROSCUROS, integración exitosa de las pequeñas y medianas empresas en México, Enrique Dussel Peters (coordinador),CEPAU JUS, México, 2001. Sociologíadel desarrollo, politicas socialesy democracia,RolandoFranco (coordinador), CEPAUSiglo XXI, México, 2001. Crisis financierasen pakes exitosos,RicardoFfrench-Davis(compilador), CEPAUMcGraw Hill, Santiago, 2001. Una década de luces y sombras. América Latina y el Caribe en los noventa, CEPAUAlfaomega, Colombia, 2001. DesarrolloRuralenAmérica Latinaye/ Caribe,Beatriz David, CEPAU Alfaomega, Colombia, 2001. Equidad, desarrolloy ciudadanía,Tomos I, II y Ill, CEPAUAlfaomega, Colombia, 2000. La distribución delingresoenAméricaLatinaye/ Caribe, Samuel Morley, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 2000. inversión y reformas económicas en América Latina, Graciela Moguillanskyy Ricardo Bielschowsky, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 2000. Reformas estructurales, productividady conducta tecnológica enAmérica Latina, Jorge Katz, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 2000. Reformaseconómicas,crecimientoy empleo. Los mercados de trabajo en América Latina y el Caribe, Jürgen Weller, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 2000. Crecimiento,empleoy equidad. El impacto de las reformas económicas en América Latina y el Caribe, Barbara Stallings y Wilson Peres, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 2000. Growth, employment, and equity The impact of the Economic Reforms in Latin America and the Caribbean, Barbara Stallings and Wilson Peres, CEPAUBrookings Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 2000. Cinqüenta anos de pensamento na CEPAL,Tomos I y II, Ricardo Bielschowsky, CEPALIRECORDICOFECOM, Brasil, 2000. lntegración regional, desarrollo y equidad, Armando Di Filippo y Rolando Franco, CEPAUSiglo XXI, México, 2000. Ensayosobre el financiamientode la seguridadsocial en salud,Tomos I y II, Daniel Titelman y Andras Uthoff, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Chile, 2000. Brasil urna década ern fransiqa’o, Renato Baumann, CEPAU CAMPUS, Brasil, 2000. El gran eslabón: educacióny desarrollo en el umbral del sigloXXl, Martin Hopenhayny ErnestoOttone, CEPAUFondode Cultura Económica, Argentina, 1999. La modernidad problemática: cuatro ensayos sobre el desarrollo Latinoamericano,Emesto Ottone, CEPAUJUS, México, 2000. La inversión en Chile ¿El fin de un ciclo de expansión?, Graciela Mouguillansky,CEPAUFondode Cultura Económica, Santiago, 1999. La reforma del sistema financiero internacional: un debate en marcha, José Antonio Ocampo, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 1999. Macroeconomía,comercio y finanzas para reformar las reformas en América Latina, Ricardo Ffrench Davis, CEPAUMc Graw-Hill, Santiago, 1999. Cincuenta años de pensamiento en la CEPAL: textos seleccionados, dos volúmenes,CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 1998.
Grandes empresasygrupos industriales latinoamericanos,Wilson Peres (coordinador),CEPAUSiglo XXI, BuenosAires, 1998. Flujos de Capitale lnversiónProductiva. Leccionespara América Latina, Ricardo Ffrench-Davis-Helmut Reisen (compiladores),CEPAUMc Graw Hill, Santiago, 1997. Estrategias empresarialesen tiempos de cambio, Bernardo Kosacoff (editor), CEPAUUniversidad Nacional de Quilmes,Argentina, 1998. La lgualdadde los Modernos:reflexiones acerca de la realizaciónde los derechos económicos, sociales y culturales en América Latina, CEPAUIIDH, Costa Rica, 1997. La Economia Cubana. Reformas estructurales y desempen'oen los noventa, Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe. CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, México, 1997. Politicas para mejorar la inserción en la economia mundial. América Latina y El Caribe, CEPAL/Fondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 1997. América Latina y el Caribequinceaiios después. De la décadaperdida a la transformacióneconómica 1980-1995, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, Santiago, 1996. Tendgncias econdmicas e sociais na América Latina e no Caribd Economic and social trends in Latin America and the CaribbeanITendenciaseconómicasy sociales en América Latina y el Caribe, CEPAUlBGElCARECON RIO, Brasil, 1996. Hacia un nuevo modelode organizaciónmundial. El sectormanufacturero argentino en los an'os noventa, Jorge Katz, Roberto Bisang, Gustavo Burachick (editores), CEPAUIDRCIAlianzaEditorial, Buenos Aires, 1996. Las nuevas corrientes financieras hacia América Latina: fuentes, efectos y politicas, Ricardo Ffrench-Davis y Stephany GriffithJones (compiladores), México, CEPAUFondo de Cultura Económica, primera edición, 1995.
Cuadernos de la CEPAL 89 Energia y desarrollo sustentable en América Latina y el Caribe. Guía para la formulación de políticasenergéticas, 2003,240 p.
80 La ciudad inclusiva, Marcello Balbo, Ricardo Jordan y Daniela Simioni (compiladores), CEPAUCooperazione Italiana, 2003, 322 p.
87 Congestión de trinsito. El problema y cómo enfrentarlo, 2003, Alberto Bull (compilador), 114 p.
86 Industria, medio ambiente en Méxicoy Centroamérica.Un reto de supervivencia,2001,182 p.
78 Centroaméricay el TLC: efectos inmediatos e implicaciones futuras, 1996,174p. 77 La reforma laboraly la partic@aciónprivada en los puertos delsecfor público, 1996,168p.
77 Labour reform and private participation in public-sectorports, 1996,160 p. 76 Dinimica de la población y desarrolloeconómico,1997,116p. 75 Crecimientode la poblacióny desarrollo,1995,95 p. 74 América Latina y el Caribe:dinimica de la población y desarrollo, 1995,151p. 73 Elgasto social enAmérica Latina: un examen cuantitativoy cualifativo, 1995,167p. 72 Productividad de los pobres rurales y urbanos, 1995,318 p. (out of stock) 71 focalización ypobreza, 1995,249p. (out of stock) 70 Canales, cadenas, corredores y competitividad: un enfoque sistémico y su aplicación a seis productos latinoamericanos de exportación, 1993,183 p. 69 Las finanzas públicas de América Latina en la década de 1980, 1993,100 p. 69 Public finances in Latin America in the 7980s, 1993, 96 p. 68 La reestructuracidnde empresaspúblicas: el caso de los puertos de América Latina y el Caribe, 1992,148 p. 68 The restructuring of public-sector enterprises: the case of Latin America and Caribbean ports, 1992, 129 p. 67 La transferencia de recursos externos de América Latina en la posguerra, 1991,92 p. 67 Postwar transfer of resources abroad by Latin America, 1992,90 p. 66 The Caribbean: one and divisible, 1994, 207 p. 66 Cambios estructurales en los puertos y la competitividad del comercio exterior de América Latina y el Caribe, 1991, 141 p. 65 Structural changes in ports and the competitivenessof Latin America and Caribbean foreign trade, 1990, 126 p. 64 La industriade transporteregular internacionaly la competitividad delcomercioexterior de los países de América Latina y el Caribe, 1989,132 p. 64 The international common-carrier transportation industry and the competitiveness of the foreign trade of the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean, 1989, 116 p. 63 Elementospara el disen'o de politicas industrialesy tecnológicas en América Latina, 1990, 23ed. 1991,172 p.
Cuadernos Estadísticos de la CEPAL
85 Centroamérica,Méxicoy RepúblicaDominicana:maquilay transformacibn productiva, 1999,190 p. 84 El régimen de contratación petrolera de América Latina en la década de los noventa, 1998,134 p. 83 Temasy desafios de las politicas de poblaciónen los an'os noventa en América Latinaye/ Caribe, 1998,268 p. 82 A dinámica do Setor SaÚde no Brasil, 1997,220 p. 81 La apedura económicay el desarrolloagricola en América Latinay el Caribe,1997,136 p. 80 Evolucióndelgasto público social en América Latina: 1980-1995, 1998,200 p. 79 Ciudadania y derechos humanos desde la perspectiva de las politicas públicas, 1997, 124 p.
30 Clasificaciones estad i .ticas internacionales incorporadas en el
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bancode datos del comercioexterior deAmérica Latina y el Caribe de la CEPAL,2004,308 p. América Latina y el Caribe: series estadisticassobre comerciode servicios 1980-2001,2003,150p. DireccióndelcomeraoextenbrdeAmérica Latina,según /a dasifcación centra/deproductospro~sbn& delasNaciOnes Unidas,2001,532 p. América Latina y el Caribe: series regionales y oficiales de cuentas nacionales 1950-1998,2001,136p. América Latinay el Caribe:series estadisticassobre comercio de servicios 1980-1997,1998,124p. Clasificacionesestadisticasinternacionalesincorporadas en el Banco
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de Datos del ComercioExteriordeAmérica Latina y el Caribede la CEPAL, 1998,287 p. Chile:comercioexteriorsegún grupos de la Clasificación Uniforme para el ComercioInternacional, Rev: 3, ypaíses de destinoy procedencia, 1990-1995,1996,480p. América Latinay el Caribe:series regionales y oficiales de cuentas nacionales, 1950-1994,1996,136p. América Latina y el Caribe: dirección del comercio exterior de los principales productos alimenticios y agrícolas según países de des: tinoy procedencia, 1970-1993,1995,224p. Estructura del gasto de consumo de los hogares en América Latina, 1995,274p. Dirección del comercioexterior deAmerica Latinay el Caribesegún principales productos y grupos de productos, 1970-1992, 1994, 483 p. América Latina: comercio exterior según la clasificación lndustrial lnternacionaluniformede todas las actividadeseconómicas(CllU) Vol. I, Exportaciones, 1985-1991, 1993, 285 p. Vol. II, Importaciones, 1985-1991,1993, 291 p. Clasificaciones estadísticas internacionales incorporadas en el Banco de Datos del Comercio Exterior de América Latina y el Caribe de la CEPAL, 1993, 323 p. Comerciointrazonalde los paises de la Asociaciónde Integración, según capítulos de la Clasificación Uniforme para el Comercio /nternacional (CUCI), Rev. 2,1992,299 p. Origeny destino del comercio exterior de los países de la Asociación Latinoamericanade Integración,I991, I90 p. América Latina y el Caribe: series regionalesde cuentas nacionales a precios constantes de 1980,1991,245 p,
Estudios e Informes de la CEPAL 95 México: la industria maquiladora,1996,237p. 94 lnnovación en tecnologíasy sistemas de gestión ambientalesen empresaslíderes latinoamericanas,1995,206 p. (out of stock) 93 Comerciointernacionaly medioambiente.La discusiónactual, 1995, 112 p. (out of stock) 92 Reestructuracióny desarrolloproductivo: desafíoy potencial para los aiíos noventa, 1994,108 p. 91 Las empresas transnacionalesde una economía en transición: la experienciaargentinaen los años ochenta, 1995,193p. 90 El papel de las empresas transnacionales en la reestructuración industrialde Colombia:una sintesis, 1993,131p. 89 N impacto económicoy social de las migracionesen Centroamérica, 1993,78 p. 88 El comercio de manufacturas deAmérica Latina. Evolución y estructura 1962-1989,1992,150 p. 87 Análisis de cadenas agroindustrialesen Ecuador y PerÚ, 1993, 294 p. 86 lnversiónextranjeray empresas transnacionalesen la economia de Chile (1974-1989). El papel de/ capital extranjeroy la estrategia nacionalde desarrollo,1992,l 63 p. a5 lnversión extranjeray empresas transnacionalesen la economía de Chile (1974- 1989). Proyectosde inversióny extrategiasde las empresastransnacionales,1992,257 p. 84 La transformaciónde la producción en Chile: cuatro ensayos de interpretación,1993,372 p.
83 Reestructuracióny desarrollo de la industria automotrizmexicana en los aiíos ochenta: evolucióny perspectivas, 1992,191 p. 82 América Latina y el Caribe: el manejo de la escasez de agua, 1991,148 p. 81 Magnitud de la pobreza en América Latina en los aiíos ochenta, 1991,177~.
80 lmpacto ambiental de la contaminación hídrica producida por la Refinería Estatal Esmeraldas: análisis técnico-económico,1991, 190 p. 79 La industria de bienes de capital en América Latinay el Caribe:su desarrollo en un marco de cooperaciónregional, 1991, 235 p. 78 La apertura financieraen Chiley el comportamientode los bancos transnacionales,1990,132p. 77 Los recursos hídricosdeAmérica Latina y del Caribe:planificación, desastresnaturalesy contaminación,1990,266 p. 77 The water resources of Latin America and the Caribbeanplanning, hazards and pollution, 1990,252 p.
Serie INFOPLAN: Temas Especiales del Desarrollo Políticas sociales: resúmenesde documentosI/,1997,80 p. Gestión de la información: resefias de documentos, 1996,152 p. Modernización del Estado: resúmenes de documentos,1995,75p. Políticas sociales: resúmenes de documentos,1995,95 p. MERCOSUR: resúmenes de documentos,1993,219 p. Reseñas de documentos sobre desarrollo ambientalmente sustentable, 1992,217 p. (out of stock) 7 Documentos sobre privatización con énfasis en América Latina, 1991, 82 p.
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Boletin demografico/Demographic BuIletin (bilingual) Bilingual publication (Spanish and English) proving up-to-date estimates and projections of the populations of the Latin American and Caribbean countries. Also includesvarious demographic indicators of interest such as fertility and mortality rates, life expectancy, measures of population distribution, etc. Published since 1968,the Bulletinappears twice a year in January and July. Annual Subscription: US$20.00 Per issue: US$15.00
Notas de población Specializedjournal which publishes articles and reportson recent studies of demographic dynamics in the region, in Spanish with abstracts in Spanish and English. Also includes information on scientific and professional activities in the field of population. Published since 1973,the journal appears twice a year in June and December. Annual Subscription: US$20.00 Per issue: US$12.00
Series de la CEPAL Comercio internacional Desarrollo productivo Estudiosestadísticosy prospectivos Estudios y perspectivas: - Bogotá - Buenos Aires - México Financiamientodel desarrollo Información y desarrollo Informes y estudios especiales Macroeconomía del desarrollo Manuales Medio ambiente y desarrollo Poblacióny desarrollo Políticassociales Recursos naturales e infraestructura Seminarios y conferencias A complete listing is available at: www.eclac.cl/publicaciones
HOW TO OBTAIN UNITED NATIOKS PUBLICATIONS United Nations publications may be obtained from bookstores and distributors throughout the world. Consult your bookstore or write to: United Nations, Sales Section, New York or Geneva.
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Distribution Unit CEPAL - Casilla 179-D Fax (562)208-1946 E-mail: publications@ eclac.cl Santiago, Chile